The main trait leading to the deaths of Romeo and Juliet are that of haste. The shakespearian play, Romeo and Juliet, takes place in 6 days and ends tragicly due to coincidences. haste and rashfull thinking lead the two to get married in secret, lead Romeo to slay Tybalt, lead Juliet to fake her death, ect. If the two lovers had stopped to think for a moment instead of pinning over each other their deaths could have been prevented. If they had thought to stop and think they may have simply asked their parents to allow them to marry and that would have been the end. As it seems that both Montagues and Capulets would have agreed to marry them.
He is terribly unlucky. OK, so that's not a character trait, but it is the chief reason for Romeo's death. You can't really call it a downfall, because he is not one of those neo-Aristotelian tragic heroes who starts out a king and ends up blind or dead. Romeo is just a rich kid, just as Othello is just a good soldier. Some tragic protagonists are not great kings. And not all tragedies happen because of the character of the tragic protagonist. The two things that Romeo did which contribute to his tragedy are to fight Tybalt and to ride from Mantua to Verona and kill himself. As for the first, Romeo's character is not belligerent. He is not involved in the brawl in Act 1. He is not invested in the feud; he goes after Capulet girls all the time (Rosaline was a Capulet remember). And faced with Tybalt who was trying to start a fight with him for no good reason, Romeo avoids the conflict. Romeo only fights Tybalt after becoming intensely emotional after Tybalt skewers his friend who then, while coughing up blood, blames Romeo for his death. Who wouldn't be in the grip of his emotions under these circumstances? To say that Romeo is has an impetuous character is ridiculous; if he had, he would have fought Tybalt in the first place. The same can be said about leaving Mantua for Verona. Romeo does not leave without first getting as much information as Balthazar can give him. Are you sure Juliet is really dead? Didn't the friar give you a message to take to me? And all the information he gets adds up to the same thing. What other conclusion could he come to? But he has terrible luck, because if the process of buying poison, riding to Verona, opening the crypt, fighting Paris and killing him, and dragging him into the tomb had taken two minutes longer than it did, Romeo would have arrived to find a bewildered Juliet ready to embrace him. That two minutes' difference cannot be attributed to some imagined character trait.
• an overly passionate sense of love
• a tendency to act impulsively
• a capacity for feeling an emotions too deeply
Balthasar brings Romeo the news of Juliet's "death"
Yes. Throughout the story Tybalt continues to be an angry , war craving , and spiteful character. A flat character is 1 with very few traits and Tybalt defines that well.
Balthasar told romeo about juliet's death.
romeo died from drinking poison and Juliet died from stabbing herself in chest
Romeo takes his own life, here is the story Romeo hears of Juliet's death, Romeo enters the tomb, finds Juliet's 'corpse' and poisons himself. Juliet wakes from her drug induced 'death' to find Romeo dead. Unable to live without him, she stabs herself.
He brings Romeo the news of Juliet's death.
Balthasar brings Romeo the news of Juliet's "death"
In "Romeo and Juliet" by William Shakespeare, Count Paris is saddened by Juliet's death and offers to help Lord Capulet with funeral arrangements. He is portrayed as a noble character who genuinely cared for Juliet and is devastated by her untimely death.
Yes. Throughout the story Tybalt continues to be an angry , war craving , and spiteful character. A flat character is 1 with very few traits and Tybalt defines that well.
Lady Montague's death in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet" is attributed to grief caused by the death of her son, Romeo. She dies offstage, and the text does not provide a specific cause of death for her character.
the prince
Yes, the death of Romeo and Juliet did end all fighting in Verona.
Balthasar told romeo about juliet's death.
When Romeo learns of Juliet's death, he decides to purchase a deadly poison so he can join Juliet in death. He plans to go to Juliet's tomb, take the poison, and die next to her.
No, Benvolio does not die in "Romeo and Juliet." He is a character who survives until the end of the play and helps to recount the tragic events that unfolded.
Romeo's friend Balthasar tells him
Balthasar