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hello everybody and welcome to today's
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video one of the major themes in Romeo
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and Juliet is fate fate is the idea that
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the events in our lives are
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predetermined and set that there is
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nothing we can do to escape them now in
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Romeo and Juliet we can pick out
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examples of this from the plot like when
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Romeo predicts his own death before
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going to the Capulet ball or when Friar
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John fails to deliver the important
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letter to Romeo but we can also look at
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some of the more sophisticated ways
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Shakespeare presents this key theme
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in a 2010 Oxford University lecture Dr
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Emma Smith explored how Shakespeare's
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use of a prologue at the start of the
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play fits into the theme of Fate Dr
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Smith points out that there are a
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handful of Shakespeare plays that
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contain a prologue but those prologues
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usually establish the scene so for
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example the prologue in troilus and
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Cressida tells us about the Trojan Wars
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and that's an important backdrop to the
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play what's unique to Romeo and Juliet
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is that it contains a prologue which
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summarizes the entire plot in the
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biggest spoiler ever Smith asks what
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does it do to our experience of the play
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to have this clear statement of what
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will happen before it begins well for
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one it reminds us of the theme of Fate
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that no matter what the characters do to
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try and avoid it Romeo and Juliet are
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star-crossed lovers are fated to die so
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for example we can watch Friar Lawrence
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come up with his bizarre plans to try
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and make it all turn out okay but we
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know because the prologue told us that
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they will not work Romeo on Juliet's
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Fate has already been decided so by
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telling us right away what will happen
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in the play it's reinforcing the idea
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that these things are inevitable and
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that inevitability is a key element of
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Fate even the use of the sonnet form for
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the prologue reinforces the idea of Fate
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the sonnet form has a sense of what
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Smith calls syntactical inevitability we
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know the rules of a sonnet 14 lines are
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a bit pentameter a b a b c d c d e f e f
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g g rhyme scheme so again there is a
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sense that we know structurally what is
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coming next in a sonnet before it even
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happens when we read the prologue with
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an understanding of the sonnet form
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again this reinforces the idea of
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inevitability and with it fate finally
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Smith points out how inevitability is
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also presented in Shakespeare's use of
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genre Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy we
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know the generic conventions of a
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tragedy which include the death of the
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tragic hero so again there is a sense of
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inescapability to the whole thing just
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by the fact the play is a tragedy
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Benvolio can tell Romeo to flee after
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the killing of tibolt to escape the
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punishment of death threatened by the
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prince but the audience knows that it's
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fated to happen Romeo might Escape for a
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moment here but it will catch up with
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him another way and so Smith points out
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how the prologue its sonnet form and the
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genre of the play itself all highlight
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the theme of fate and there are other
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things we can add to that analysis too
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in his 1975 essay the visual Artistry of
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Romeo and Juliet James Black points out
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how the entire play is filled with
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parallel scenes that mirror each other
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black refers to what he labels stage
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pictures which are shown twice or more
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than twice in the play let's look at
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some examples in Acts 2 scene 2 Romeo is
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in the orchard talking to Juliet who
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appears Aloft at the window in act 3
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scene 5 the scene starts with Romeo and
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Juliet's room but he soon descends and
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is once again in the orchard talking to
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Juliet above at the the window the two
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scenes then are mirror images of each
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other as I've explored in my character
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analysis video Paris and Romeo are often
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seen in parallel moments at the end of
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act 1 scene one Benvolio tells Romeo to
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take his mind off Rosaline by looking at
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other beautiful women in the very next
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scene Capulet gives Paris similar advice
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Shakespeare employs the same metaphors
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for the two characters nurse calls Paris
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a man of wax in act 1 scene 3 whilst
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fire Lawrence tells Romeo thine Noble
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shape is but a form of wax in act 3
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scene 3. in act 2 scene 3 Romeo tells
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Friar Lawrence how he has fallen in love
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with Juliet and Friar Lawrence advises
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Romeo to slow down telling him wisely
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and slow they stumble that run fast in
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act 3 scene 6 Paris tells Friar Lawrence
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how the marriage with Juliet is to take
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place on Thursday and the friar replies
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on Thursday sir the time is very short
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so Friar Lawrence cautions both Romeo
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and Paris against their hasty deeper
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shoot of Juliet in act 2 scene 6 Friar
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Lawrence waits in his cell with Romeo
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And as Juliet approaches fire Lawrence
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says here comes the lady similarly in
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Act 4 scene one Friar Lawrence waits in
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his cell with Paris and when Juliet
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enters fry Lawrence says here comes the
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lady and in act 5 scene 3 Paris attends
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with this page telling him give me those
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flowers whilst Romeo attends with his
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servant telling him give me that matuk
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and the wrenching iron why might
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Shakespeare want the audience to see
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Paris and Romeo as similar well we're
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once again reminded of the key theme of
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fate in the play if it were not for the
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fact that Romeo was from the enemy
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Montague family the audience realizes
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that Romeo could and almost certainly
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would be the ones seeking out capulet's
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blessing for the marriage he would be
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pursuing Juliet in the socially accepted
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mode of the day seeing Paris pursue
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Juliet this way heightens the sense of
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tragedy that the star-crossed lovers
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cannot do the same but in a more complex
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reading the parallel between Paris and
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Romeo are just part of this bigger
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picture of parallels in the entire play
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and there are many more black points out
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how the prince's three appearances are
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all mirror images of each other in act 1
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scene 1 act 3 scene one and at five
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Scene Three we see the prince Lord
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Montague and Lord Capulet on stage
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together and on all three occasions
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Prince stands to arbitrate between the
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families another obvious example of
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mirroring is seen when Juliet is found
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having faked her death in Act 4 scene 5
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and then Juliet is found to actually be
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dead in act 5 scene 3 and finally as
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I've already explored in the Benvolio
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character analysis video there are a
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number of occasions where a character on
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stage retells events that the audience
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has already just witnessed in Acts 1
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scene one after the brawl Benvolio tells
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Montague what has happened then in act 3
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scene 1 after the deaths of Mercutio and
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tibolt Benvolio tells the prince what
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has happened in act 5 scene 3 the fryer
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does the same retelling pretty much the
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whole plot in these examples the
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audience sees something happen and then
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immediately after he is a retelling of
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the same events so why does the audience
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see or hear similar things time and time
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again in terms of our key theme of Fate
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we can say that the continual repetition
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of events reflects how they are
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inescapable everything seems to be
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cyclical going round and round in
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circles it's happened before it'll
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happen again Romeo and Juliet's fate is
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sealed it's inescapable black makes a
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different point though to him things are
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always more intense when they are
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repeated so in the first balcony scene
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Juliet warns Romeo that it's dangerous
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for him to be found in the Orchard and
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that's a warning Romeo dismisses but by
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the second balcony scene all the Rona is
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Mortal to him as Romeo has been banished
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following the murder of tibolt black
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explains the parallels emphasize the
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differences things look the same but are
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painfully altered and black call this
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the process of intensification through
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parallel think again about the parallels
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of the meetings at Friar Lawrence's cell
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yes there are lots of similarities but
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Juliet and Romeo met rapturously at
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Lawrence's cell whilst the meeting with
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Paris is at a time when things have
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become much more terrible the friar and
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audience know that julieta's secretly
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married Romeo that's the Romeo who's
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just killed tibolt and been banished and
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that she now has been ordered by her
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father to marry Paris and how about the
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three appearances of the prince in act 1
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scene 1 he arrives after a fight but
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everyone's still alive in that three
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scene one things have intensified and he
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arrives shortly after the deaths of
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tibolt and Mercutio in act 5 scene 3
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things have intensified even further and
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he arrives after the deaths of Romeo
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Juliet and Paris so here is the key yes
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we see the same kind of things happening
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time and time again but each time things
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are more intense the tension is greater
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and of course the conflict is building
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up and and up to the final tragic ending
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that we all know is coming now in Romeo
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and Juliet it's often revealing to
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explore the first time an audience meets
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a character also sometimes something
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happens in the play that doesn't seem to
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make sense in terms of what we've come
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to expect let's look at some examples
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firstly why does the nurse speak in
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blank verse when the audience first
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meets her in act 1 scene 3. Shakespeare
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essentially uses three different types
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of speech for characters blank first
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prose and rhymed verse blank verse is
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iambic pentameter that does not rhyme it
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has lines of 10 syllables with
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alternating unstressed and stressed
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syllables in your copy of the play blank
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verse looks like poetry written out on
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the page and blank verse is typically
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used by upper class characters and the
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nobility prose is ordinary written
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language there's no rhyme scheme or
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specific metrical structure in your copy
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of the play prose looks like ordinary
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written sentences and paragraphs usually
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the prose is given to characters of low
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social status or those engaged in comic
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scenes rhymed verse is unsurprisingly
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lines of verse which rhyme Shakespeare
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also uses rhyming couplets two lines
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that rhyme often in iambit pentameter to
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Signal the end of a scene again it looks
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like poetry on the page so in what is a
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definite break from the norm Shakespeare
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uses blank verse for the Nurse's
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dialogue in act 1 scene 3. there are
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times later in the play when she drops
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into prose like when she jokes with
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Juliet but it's significant that the
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first time we meet her she's speaking in
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blank verse and of course the question
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is why why would Shakespeare use blank
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verse for a lower class character well
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for one Shakespeare is highlighting how
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the nurse's character is significant not
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to be written off as simply a source of
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comic relief the nurse or more
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specifically what she symbolizes in the
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play is important secondly perhaps
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Shakespeare is showing us how nurse
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transcends her status as a lower class
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character due to the closeness of her
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relationship with Juliet nurses
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essentially a surrogate parent to Juliet
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just like Friar Lawrence's to Romeo and
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the blank verse symbolizes this so what
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does the nurse symbolize crystal
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bartolovic in her piece first as tragedy
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then as gender genre history and Romeo
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and Juliet explores how the nurse
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represents nurturing and comedy
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bartonovich points out how nurse not
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only nurtures Juliet but also nurtures
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the relationship between Romeo and
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Juliet after meeting Romeo in act 1
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scene 5 Juliet asks nurse to identify
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him then an act 2 scene 4 Juliet
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confides in her nurse and sent her to
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meet Romeo it is the nurse who takes the
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rope ladder needed for Romeo to ascend
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into Juliet's chamber and the nurse who
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sets it up in act 3 scene 2. it's the
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nurse who's sent to deliver a message in
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a ring to Romeo at Friar Lawrence's cell
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in app 3 scene 3 snatching away a dagger
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from Romeo who offers to stab himself in
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the same scene it's the nurse who warns
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Juliet in at 3 scene 5 that her mother's
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about to walk into the room and find
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Romeo with her and it's the nurse who
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stands up to Capulet in the same scene
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telling him you are to blame to rate her
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so we therefore see very clearly that
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the nurse has a nurturing role both
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nurturing Juliet but also the
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relationship between the two lovers in
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terms of Comedy nurses arguably the
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funniest character in the entire play
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and I don't think I need to go into
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examples here but you can see my
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character analysis video for a number of
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examples now if nurse represents
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nurturing and comedy and Shakespeare's
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use of blank first presents these as
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significant the next question is why
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doesn't she appear on stage at the end
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of the play this is one of those things
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that we would say it doesn't quite make
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sense the prologue tells us that Romeo
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and Juliet's death will bury their
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parents strife and at first glance it
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does seem that the play ends on a
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positive note with Montague pledging to
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create Juliet's statue in pure gold but
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is it really really a case of and they
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all lived happily ever after Crystal
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bartolovich explores the staging at the
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end of the play in the final scene who
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does the audience see on stage the act 5
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scene three stage directions tell us
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that there are over a dozen characters
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there Paris Paige Romeo Balthazar Friar
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Lawrence Juliet first Watchman second
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Watchman third Watchman princess
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attendance Montague Capulet Lady Capulet
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and unnamed others so basically we see
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almost everyone except the nurse in
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Shakespeare's play Friar Lawrence
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explains to the marriage her nurse is
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privy but why isn't nurse there to
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explain her side of the story her
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absence at the end of the play is all
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the more notable bartolovic points out
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because the Arthur Brooke poem Romeos
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and Juliet from 1562 and the text known
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as the principal source for
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Shakespeare's play does mention the
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nurse at the end telling us the nurse of
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Juliet is banished in her age so why
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does Shakespeare leave the nurse out
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well I I asked Crystal bartolovic about
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this and I'm going to use her reply with
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permission as it's so helpful to those
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of us studying the play what I was
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trying to suggest is that the ending of
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the play presents us with tragic social
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order from which the nurse is
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specifically excluded because she
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represents attributes that are also
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absent from the unredeemed social order
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we have at the end of the play nurturing
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and comedy so the ending of the play
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does contain some positive resolution as
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the prologue told us it does bury their
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parents Strife however the absence of
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nurse on stage reminds us that this is
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not the case for everyone the nurse and
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the nurturing and comedy she represents
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has disappeared forever another
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interesting first character appearance
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is that of Friar Lawrence Shakespeare
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introduces fire Lawrence in act 2 scene
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3 with the character giving a very long
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speech about the power of plants when
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Romeo arrives his speech is 30 lines
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long about a topic which seems
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inconsequential why does Shakespeare do
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this the fire explains how within the
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infant rind of this small flower poison
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hath residents and Medicine power in
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other words some plants have the
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capacity for both good and evil
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depending on how they are used this
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speech foreshadows the apothecary's use
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of poison later in the play but it can
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also be seen as a significant part of
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the Friar's character Jonathan Marx
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writes Friar Lawrence reads Vice and
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virtue Grace and Rebellion into nature
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but he thinks that the virtual Vice of
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things depends on their right or wrong
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use and that he is capable of
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distinguishing between right and wrong
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use and even of transforming Vice into
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virtue through his knowledge virtue and
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vice Grace and Rebellion are objects to
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be manipulated by the Noah of nature the
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Friar's activities suggest that he
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thinks he can use human beings just as
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he uses herbs he attempts to use Romeo
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and Juliet to make peace between the
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montagues and capulets concerning
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himself more with this objective than
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and The Souls of the young lovers we
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therefore see a friar who mistakenly
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thinks his skill with plants can be
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applied to the world of humans and the
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results of his thinking are of course
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tragic
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it's also interesting to think about the
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first time we meet Benvolio let's look
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at benvolio's first lines partfuls put
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up your swords you know not what you do
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the phrase you know not what you do
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would remind the Contemporary audience
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of the words of Jesus in the Bible in
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which he says father forgive them for
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they know not what they do this biblical
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Echo is all the more impactful when we
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consider Shakespeare's use of structure
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Sampson and Gregory's sexual innuendo
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and puns from just moments before
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contrast greatly with benvolio's
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religious language when we add the fact
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that the name Benvolio translates
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roughly to Peacekeeper the audience
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might assume that he will fulfill a
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christ-like religious role in the play
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and there is some truth to this although
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it's not clear-cut and I explore that in
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my Benvolio character analysis video but
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even if we take Benvolio at his best and
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see him as a peacekeeper and
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semi-religious figure he's still unable
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to stop things that are fated to happen
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if Romeo and Juliet are star crossed as
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the prologue suggests then nothing is
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unable to prevent their deaths even the
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christ-like Benvolio fits into this
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despite his best efforts he cannot
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prevent the tragedy from unfolding
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despite trying to stop the fight in act
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1 scene 1 the fighting continues despite
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trying to prevent a fight in act 1 scene
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3 there is a fight despite bending the
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truth in his report to the prince in act
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3 scene 1 in order to prevent Romeo's
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death Romeo dies anyway we therefore see
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that despite his best efforts and
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semi-religious Status Benvolio is unable
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to prevent things from happening and his
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character reminds the audience that fate
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determines what takes place in life
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something else that doesn't make a whole
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lot of sense is the sudden change in
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paris's characterization up until act
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five Shakespeare presents Paris in an
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overly negative manner interestingly in
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act 5 Paris suddenly comes to life as a
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character in his own right for a start
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we get the sense that Paris truly cares
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about Juliet as he goes to cover her
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tomb with flowers thinking Romeo has
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come to the tomb to do some villainous
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shame to the dead bodies he ends up
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fighting him and Romeo kills Paris as he
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dies Paris asks Romeo to lay me with
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Juliet to which Romeo agrees paris's
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actions here are not those of a villain
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or a bumbling idiot as we've seen in the
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first four acts they are heroic and More
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in line with what we've come to know of
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Romeo even Romeo sees how similar he is
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to Paris saying oh give me thy hand one
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writ with me in sour misfortune's book
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so why does Shakespeare present Paris so
00:18:15
valiantly in this Final Act well in
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Shakespearean tragedy and it's double
00:18:19
Kent Cartwright States paris's very
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position as Romeo's antagonist makes him
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of course the reprise of tibult an
00:18:27
antagonist is a character or sometimes a
00:18:29
group of characters who acts in
00:18:31
opposition to the protagonist the main
00:18:33
character the protagonist Romeo wants to
00:18:35
be with Juliet but the antagonist Paris
00:18:38
gets in his way resulting in a fight to
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the death what's so clever ever is that
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now the previous antagonist tibolt is
00:18:45
dead Shakespeare needed someone else to
00:18:47
take on the role to keep the dramatic
00:18:49
tension high and for this reason the
00:18:52
previously one-dimensional idiotic Paris
00:18:55
now transforms into a brave and heroic
00:18:57
character willing to fight to the death
00:19:00
to defend the honor of Juliet and so
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whilst at first glance Paris seems
00:19:05
little more than a one-dimensional
00:19:06
villain Shakespeare draws parallels
00:19:08
between him and Romeo transforming his
00:19:10
character into something much more
00:19:12
significant as the play comes to a close
00:19:14
another interesting point is how it
00:19:17
doesn't make sense how quickly Lord
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Capulet changes his mind about Paris
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marrying Juliet in act 1 scene 2 Capulet
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told Paris to woo Juliet for himself but
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in act 3 scene 4 the very next day
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Capulet suddenly decides the marriage
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will go ahead in a couple of days time I
00:19:34
think she will be ruled in all respects
00:19:36
by me Namor I doubt it not so what has
00:19:40
changed we know for certain and that
00:19:42
Paris has not had a chance to woo Juliet
00:19:44
she gave her attention to Romeo at the
00:19:47
ball why is Capulet changed his mind
00:19:49
today we instinctively know that
00:19:51
capulet's actions are wrong we know that
00:19:53
Juliet should be making her own choices
00:19:55
about whom she marries but in
00:19:57
Elizabethan England an audience would
00:19:59
not necessarily feel the same way
00:20:01
arranged marriages were common for
00:20:03
upper-class families so what does
00:20:05
Shakespeare want his audience to think
00:20:06
about Capulet and his patriarchal
00:20:09
control whilst an Elizabethan audience
00:20:11
would have been familiar with capulet's
00:20:13
position to choose his daughter's
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husband what no audience would be able
00:20:17
to understand is his Sudden Change of
00:20:19
Mind Shakespeare is implying very
00:20:21
clearly that Capulet and what he
00:20:24
symbolizes is wrong it's similar to Mr
00:20:26
Burling in An Inspector Calls the
00:20:29
dramatic irony of him saying the Germans
00:20:31
don't want war and the Titanic is
00:20:32
Unsinkable is used to ridicule the
00:20:35
character and by extension what he
00:20:37
stands for and it's the same with
00:20:39
Capulet his complete change of mind
00:20:41
ridicules him as a character and
00:20:43
therefore ridicules what he stands for
00:20:45
which is the patriarchy patriarchy is a
00:20:48
system in which men possess power and
00:20:50
women are excluded from it patriarchy
00:20:52
also refers specifically to a family
00:20:54
where the father is in control and we
00:20:57
see both in Romeo and Juliet Juliet's
00:20:59
father decides whom she marries and when
00:21:01
Paris discusses his marriage proposal
00:21:04
with Lord Capulet not with Juliet so is
00:21:07
Shakespeare endorsing patriarchy or
00:21:09
criticizing it in one way we can see the
00:21:12
play as an endorsement of patriarchal
00:21:14
control the two lovers who break the
00:21:16
rules end up dead after all but
00:21:18
capulet's sudden change of mind
00:21:20
undermines his character by extension
00:21:22
this undermines what he represents about
00:21:25
patriarchal control let's finish with an
00:21:28
idea about the parallels between Romeo
00:21:30
and Juliet Romeo and Juliet are both
00:21:32
young Juliet is 13 we know this from act
00:21:35
1 scene 2 where capuleta explains she
00:21:38
hath not seen the change of 14 years in
00:21:41
other words she hasn't yet had her 14th
00:21:43
birthday and we don't have a clear
00:21:45
indication of Romeo's age but we can be
00:21:48
certain he is still an adolescent like
00:21:49
Juliet one piece of evidence for this is
00:21:52
that he still lives with his parents
00:21:54
seen when they tell Benvolio in act 1
00:21:56
scene one how Romeo private in his
00:21:58
chamber pens himself meaning he locks
00:22:01
himself in his bedroom secondly as Susan
00:22:03
Snyder points out in Shakespeare a
00:22:05
wayward journey in the same scene
00:22:07
Montague says that Romeo is like the bud
00:22:10
bit with an envious worm here he can
00:22:12
spread his sweet leaves to the air this
00:22:15
imagery suggests Romeo has not yet
00:22:17
arrived at maturity he's still a bud a
00:22:19
bud is a part of a plant which is not
00:22:21
yet developed into a leaf or flower
00:22:23
Shakespeare also uses structure to draw
00:22:26
parallels between the Youth of Romeo and
00:22:28
Juliet before we meet Romeo himself his
00:22:32
parents talk about him with concern and
00:22:34
the same can be said with Juliet Snyder
00:22:37
notes how each of the two protagonists
00:22:39
is introduced to us first as the
00:22:41
objective parental concern before we
00:22:44
meet Romeo we learn that his parents are
00:22:46
worried about his sadness in act 1 scene
00:22:48
1 and in the very next scene Capulet is
00:22:51
working on his daughter's future through
00:22:52
negotiating her marriage to Paris
00:22:54
Shakespeare's used to structure is key
00:22:56
here not only are these two scenes
00:22:59
consecutive to highlight the
00:23:00
similarities between the two but the way
00:23:02
in which both are spoken about by their
00:23:04
parents before we as an audience meet
00:23:06
them highlights how they are both
00:23:08
adolescents now just like with James
00:23:10
Black's work when we consider the
00:23:12
similarities between the two characters
00:23:14
it makes the differences all the more
00:23:16
noticeable let's look at one of those
00:23:19
differences in terms of setting here is
00:23:21
a list of every setting in the play
00:23:24
let's look at where we see Romeo
00:23:27
and where we see Juliet in the play
00:23:30
there are two things to note here
00:23:32
firstly Juliet rarely leaves her parents
00:23:35
property in fact she only does so when
00:23:37
she heads to fry Lawrence's cell she's
00:23:39
Beer's use of setting reminds us of the
00:23:41
patriarchal society in which Juliet
00:23:43
lives the use of satin for Juliet
00:23:45
reinforces this apart from a brief visit
00:23:48
to the friar in Act 4 scene 1 Juliet is
00:23:51
always seen in her father's property in
00:23:53
stark contrast to this not only is Romeo
00:23:56
never seen at home the Montague
00:23:59
household doesn't even feature as a
00:24:00
setting in the play but as arati kanikia
00:24:04
points out in architecture's pre-tax
00:24:06
spaces of translation Romeo's presence
00:24:09
can be traced at every location that is
00:24:11
mentioned in the play so Romeo
00:24:14
essentially appears everywhere at some
00:24:15
point or another whilst Juliet remains
00:24:18
at home Romeo is free to roam the
00:24:20
streets is bold enough to enter the
00:24:21
property of his sworn enemy juniat is in
00:24:24
bondage whilst Romeo is not the
00:24:26
differing expectations of a young man
00:24:28
and a young woman in Elizabeth Eastern
00:24:30
England are evident through the
00:24:32
locations in which the characters appear
00:24:34
Juliet is cautious because she has to be
00:24:37
she doesn't have the same Freedom as
00:24:38
Romeo not because of any age difference
00:24:41
but because of patriarchal society and
00:24:43
its treatment of women if you found this
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