Comparing Fate In Shakespeare's Romeo And Juliet

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The Greater Power: Fate The Friar once said, “A greater power than we can contradict hath thwarted our intents.” Romeo and Juliet is a play written by William Shakespeare about ‘a pair of star-crossed lovers’, as the prologue says, forbidden to love each other because of a family rivalry. They both eventually take their own lives, because of a power out of their control. Fate had a greater impact on the characters in the play than personal choice. This tragedy was fate because Romeo and Juliet were destined for a bad outcome. “Ah, what an unkind hour is guilty of this lamentable chance.” The Friar said (Shakespeare 273). What the Friar says is correct- this is a time of very unkind chance. The outcome was a bad fate. Romeo says before going …show more content…
“Ay, at, a scratch. Marry, ‘tis enough. Where is my page? Go villain, fetch a surgeon.” Mercutio says after getting stabbed (Shakespeare 231). Nobody could have changed the fact that he died, the fight had little to do with Romeo and Juliet’s love, but is at the same time very influential and happened by chance. Another example is: “I could not send it- here it is again- nor get a message to bring it to thee. So fearful they were thy infection.” Friar John says (Shakespeare 268). Romeo did not get the letter because of the deliverer being locked out of town because of infection. These are other other major inconveniences that was fate. In conclusion, fate has the biggest impact. Romeo and Juliet’s death was everyone’s fault, yet simultaneously nobody's fault because everything was meant to happen as it did. Everything happens for a reason, and all of the coincidental events that influenced the play were not coincidental on fate’s agenda. The odds were against the lovers before they had even met, they are star-crossed lovers. Fate plays a role in all of our lives, even today, and we have no choice in it, just like Romeo and