He is banished from Verona, meaning he cannot see Juliet. He thinks it would be better to be dead than not to see his wife, Juliet.
Romeo's banishment was worse than death, because he would rather die than not be able to see Juliet.
Being banished from Verona and away from Juliet
Romeo thinks it is worse than death. The friar knows different.
Romeo feels that to be banished is far more worse than death. Examples: "For exile hath more terror in his look, much more than death." and "There is no world without the Verona walls, but purgatory, torture, hell itself."
romeos life will be ended by his own tragic flaw
all answers are correct
Romeo is more optimistic about it. Juliet is much sadder and is very upset that she won't see him anymore where as Romeo knows that he will find a way to see her again. Romeo thinks that banishment is a harsher sentence than death, according to what he says to Friar Lawrence when Lawrence tells him the verdict.
Romeo views banishment from Verona as a fate worse than death because it means being separated from Juliet, the love of his life. He expresses despair and sees it as a punishment that is unbearable, as it prevents him from being with Juliet.
Romeo reacted with despair and heartbreak upon hearing the prince's decree of banishment. He felt as though being separated from Juliet was a fate worse than death, and he was devastated at the thought of leaving Verona and his beloved.
Juliet says that banishment is worth more than ten thousand slain Tybalt's.
Romeo sees death as more desirable than banishment because he believes that living without Juliet is worse than dying. Banishment means being separated from his love and the life he had envisioned with her, which he finds unbearable. Death, on the other hand, would bring an end to his suffering and allow him to be reunited with Juliet in the afterlife.
Romeo thinks it is worse than death. The friar knows different.
Romeo feels that to be banished is far more worse than death. Examples: "For exile hath more terror in his look, much more than death." and "There is no world without the Verona walls, but purgatory, torture, hell itself."
The horrible "b" word was banishment. Romeo and Juliet compared it to "hell" as they believed being separated from each other was worse than death.
Fates Worse Than Death was created in 1991.
A Fete Worse Than Death was created in 2003.
Fates Worse Than Death has 240 pages.
A Death Worse Than Fate was created on 1966-02-10.
A Fate Totally Worse than Death has 128 pages.