"A pair of star-crossed lovers", Romeo
and Juliet. From the opening scenes of the play these two children of feuding
families
were destined to
fall in love together and eventually die together. How does the reader see this?
How do we know it was fate which triggered these events?
Coincidence
caused the death of these two lovers. For this reason Romeo and Juliet is one
of Shakespeare's great tragedies. For coincidence to have caused the
death of Romeo
and Juliet it must have been evident in the events leading up to their deaths.
These events include their meeting and falling in love, their separation,
their reunion and
finally their suicides. Solving the ancient feud between their families was the
only real result of these untimely deaths. How did Romeo and Juliet
meet? Was it by
fate or could it have been avoided? Romeo and Juliet could not have avoided
coming in contact with each other, they were brought together by
uncontrollable
circumstances.
In Romeo and Juliet's time Verona (a city in Italy approximately
100 km west of Venice) was a fair sized city, and "bumping" into an
acquaintance was
unlikely. During the course of Act I, Scene II, the contrary had happened, and
happened by chance. As Romeo and Benvolio were nearing a
public area they
were stopped by a Capulet servant. After Romeo had read the guest list to the
Capulet party and the servant was on his way, Benvolio suggested
that to relieve
himself of his sadness for Rosaline, Romeo should go to the party and compare
Rosaline to the other female guests. Romeo agreed Another example
of coincidence is
evident here. If Rosaline had not been attending, Benvolio would not have
thought anything of the party. During the Capulet's ball Romeo and Juliet
had seen each
other, once this happened, there was no force that could have stopped them from
falling in love. The encounter with the servant in the city set off an
unlikely chain of
events. Given the information following, none of these events could have been
altered or avoided . "And for that offense immediately we do exile him
hence,"
(Romeo and Juliet, III, II, 191-192). Romeo's banishment and the fate involved
with it is a prime factor in the deaths of Romeo and Juliet. Why banishment?
In Act I, Scene I
the Prince's words were quite the contrary. Was it intentional that a man of
such high standard would go back on his word? Perhaps. Romeo's exile
poisons all
possibility of happiness for himself and Juliet. His exile causes Juliet great
sorrow, greater then if he had been executed, as stated by Juliet in Act III,
Scene II, lines
130-131. Juliet's sorrow drives her to obtain a "knockout potion"
from Friar Laurence which, in effect causes Romeo to make some important
decisions
regarding his well being. Romeo's banishment (brought about by the death of
Tybalt) initiated the Friar's scheme which eventually leads the two lovers to
their deaths. In
reuniting the two lovers, timing played the largest role in deciding if they
would live or die. Friar Laurence had two chances to deliver the message to
Romeo regarding
Juliet's present state. The first and most practical method of sending this
message was through Romeo's "man", Balthasar. The second method was
to send the
message with Friar John. Timing was an important factor in both of these
events. Friar Laurence had missed his opportunity to send the message with
Balthasar and
reverted to sending it with Friar John. As fate would have it, Friar John was
locked up in a condemned house because of the plague. As a result
Romeo received
incorrect information. The only information he received from the unsuspecting
Balthasar was that Juliet was dead. There are two important points to
note in this area
of the play. One being the reference to star-crossing made by Romeo when he
heard of Juliet's death. "Is it even so? then I defy you, stars."
(Romeo
and Juliet, V, I,
24). The second being that when Romeo received the poison he states "Come
cordial, and not poison, go with thee." (Romeo and Juliet, V, I, 85).
This is coincidental
to what Juliet had said earlier, in Act IV, Scene III, when she drinks to
Romeo. Cordial means hearty, or sincere. When someone drinks to
someone else it
is usually in good health. The reuniting of the two lovers in such
circumstances (Romeo's unawareness) could only have happened as it did by
timing.
One could ask
what if the friar had left early?, or what if the friar had caught Balthasar
and given him the message? Because of bad timing neither happened.
Coincidence is a
controlling element regarding the deaths of Romeo and Juliet, more so than in
other areas of the play. The following examples also deal with
"close-calls",
which involve timing as well as coincidence After Romeo had slew Paris and
entered the tomb and found Juliet's seemingly dead body, he uttered some
interesting
words. "Death that hath sucked the honey of thy breath, hath had no power
yet upon thy beauty. Thou art not conquered; beauty's ensign yet is crimson in
thy lips and
cheeks." (Romeo and Juliet, V, III, 92-95.). Here Romeo is saying how
alive Juliet looks. All he had to do was touch her and she may have been
awakened and the
play would have ended without a tragic closing. As Romeo drank the apothecaries
mixture he drank to Juliet, as she had done before in Act IV,
Scene III. This
minor coincidence does not have much bearing on the course of the play, but
changes the way we think of "toasting" to someone. Friar Laurence
entered the tomb
just less than half an hour after Romeo had killed himself. If the Friar had
entered the tomb earlier he could have explained the situation to Romeo
and no harm would
have come to anyone. The Friar has proved himself to be a brave man. He married
Romeo and Juliet without the consent of Juliet's father. Then
why did the friar
behave out of character and leave the tomb when he heard the call of the watch.
This gave Juliet the opportunity to get hold of Romeo's well placed
dagger
(coincidence?) and kill herself. If the Friar had not fled he would have
convinced Juliet not to kill herself as he did with Romeo in Act III, Scene
III. To prove
Romeo and Juliet
to be a tragedy we must first prove that the death of the two lovers was caused
by circumstances outside of their control or more simply, by
destiny. The
events which lead up to Romeo and Juliet's death are all inter-related. If any
of the events were absent from the list, the following events could not of
happened. The
list, as mentioned before is as follows; meeting, separation, reunion, and
their suicides. Romeo and Juliet's meeting has been proved to be by
coincidence. If
Romeo and Benvolio had not "bumped" into the Capulet servant the
events would not have unfolded in the way they did. Romeo and Juliet had been
separated because
Prince Escalus had ordered it, what makes this unusual is that in Act I, Scene
I, the Prince's warning indicated that further violent confrontations
would result in
death. Romeo did not receive the message from the Friar in Act V, Scene I,
because of coincidence. If he had received the message, the Friar's
scheme would have
gone as planned. Coincidence is exceedingly evident when Romeo enters the tomb
to die with Juliet as proven earlier. As the coincidences in the
novel build up,
the reader's idea of reality changes, and enables Shakespeare create one of his
greatest tragedies, Romeo and Juliet.
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