Juliet exclaims “My only love sprung from my only hate!...That I must love a loathed enemy,” (15). Juliet is exclaiming that she loves Romeo, whom her family despises. Another example is where Romeo states “here’s much to do with hate, but more with love” (8). This is showing how he previously stated that he had fallen out of love with his previous lover, and it had more to do with love than hate. These citations from the play are significant because both of them show how their anger grows mostly from love. Juliet’s anger is from her loving her family members and her trying to protect them, while Romeo’s is about how Rosaline does not love him, but he loves her with most of his heart. To sum up all the information previously presented, Shakespeare’s considerable amount of oxymoron's about love and hate are between the Montague's and the Capulet's and them trying to protect themselves and their
Juliet exclaims “My only love sprung from my only hate!...That I must love a loathed enemy,” (15). Juliet is exclaiming that she loves Romeo, whom her family despises. Another example is where Romeo states “here’s much to do with hate, but more with love” (8). This is showing how he previously stated that he had fallen out of love with his previous lover, and it had more to do with love than hate. These citations from the play are significant because both of them show how their anger grows mostly from love. Juliet’s anger is from her loving her family members and her trying to protect them, while Romeo’s is about how Rosaline does not love him, but he loves her with most of his heart. To sum up all the information previously presented, Shakespeare’s considerable amount of oxymoron's about love and hate are between the Montague's and the Capulet's and them trying to protect themselves and their