So, in the first scene, where some members from each house fight, nobody is severely hurt. The two lovers try to escape from the feud when After Romeo and Juliet get married, the violence increases, as if fate punishes both them and their houses. The first one to be lethally harmed is Mercutio of the house of the Montagues. Romeo instantly kills Tybalt, taking revenge for Mercutio’s death. This act causes him to be banished by the prince, and therefore leave Juliet. Violence is even more intense during the third scene of the fifth act, where Romeo kills Paris and, when he sees Juliet dead, drinks a poison he bought and falls dead. The last person to die is Juliet, who stabs herself with Romeo’s knife, as soon as she understands that he is dead. So, the feud between the Montagues and the Capulets undermined their own families, causing their children and three other people to …show more content…
The two lovers initially try to escape from it by creating new identities. It is their names that prevent them from making their love publicly known. This attempt is fruitless since, because of the feud, Another character that attempts to end this hatred between the two families is Friar Laurence. In his attempt, he goes against nature by making Juliet look dead in order for her family to accept her life with their enemy. He believes that by seeing their daughter dead, they would leave the hatred behind. However, the friar’s plan fails because of bad luck. This could be a hint for the fact that messing with nature always has a disastrous outcome.
What is memorable is the fact that Shakespeare may have got the inspiration for Romeo and Juliet not exclusively from Brooke’s poem, but he may have used facts from real life in England. According to Wall, Shakespeare had access to information about a feud between the Thynnes and the Marvins, whose story was similar to that of Romeo and Juliet, with some differences.
To deduce, feud in Romeo and Juliet defines the plot of the story. The main characters unproductively try to escape from it. The two families only leave their hatred behind when their own children are sacrificed to it. Romeo and Juliet were not able to live their life with the person they loved because of the feud in a patriarchal society. The play depicts the situation