Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Aspects of Love in William Shakespeares Romeo and Juliet :: Romeo and Juliet Essays
 Aspects of Love in William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet       'Aspects of Love': Discuss the various forms of love that are present     in Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet". It's a clichÃÆ'Ã © to say that Romeo     and Juliet is the greatest love story ever told. People say this     because it is the most famous love story told and the play has various     aspects of love and not only one. Even the phrase 'the greatest love     story ever told' was used as a tagline for the recent Baz Luhrmann     film. The prologue is full of violent and negative language e.g.     ancient grudge, civil blood, fatal lions, death- marked, rage. But     also has words to do with love e.g. star crossed lovers. You can     already tell that this is going to be a love story with trouble, worry     and violence in it. The first reference to an aspect of love in this     so-called "greatest love story ever told" after the Prologue is to     rape and therefore lust not love. The first two characters that the     audience is introduced to are Sampson and Gregory. They are vulgar and     crude, making many sexual references and innuendoes. They do not see     love as involving emotions or desires, but as a purely physical thing,     sexual not emotional. Sampson refers to women as "weaker vessels" and     tells of how he will rape the maids of the Montague household; "Women     being the weaker vessels are ever thrust to the wall", "I will push     Montague's men from the wall, and thrust his maids to the wall". Both     Sampson and Gregory have petty and narrow perceptions of 'love'.     Neither of them appears to have ever experienced true love. They talk     in a crude and coarse manner and see women as objects not people.     Courtly love characterises Romeo's behaviour at the start as he mopes     over the unattainable Rosaline. This is only upper class and is not     necessarily about love. It is really a series of expectations,     aristocratic societies expected their young men to idolise a woman     'out of their league. This happens to Romeo because he is self-pitying    					    
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