Romeo And Juliet Research Paper

Words: 469
Pages: 2

The twelfth night, Much Ado about nothing, Romeo and Juliet; all classic love stories that continue to have an immense impact on modern day and our entertainment industry, even though they were written over half a millennium ago. But have we only skimmed over the true meaning on these stories? Is there a deeper meaning behind Elizabethan sonnets, poems and plays that have a more significant meaning than a few cliché classics where the “boy meets the girl” and they live happily ever after? And are these ideas about love and death that are evident in many writers sonnets still relevant in the 21st century?
As much as I’d love to write an exposition explaining all of Shakespeare’s works and the significance he had on the English language and modern-day society, many are misguided to think he was the only poet and playwriter out there. Philip Sidney, Michael Drayton, Henry Constable and countless others were immortalized for helping the English language thrive and sharing their works of art in a way to express their emotions. Two Elizabethan sonnet writers that really stood out to me were John Donne and Edmund Spenser. Through their use of technical devices and their remarkable ability to appeal modern readers by their use of relatable topics, I thought this would be a perfect opportunity to
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But what if death isn’t supposed to be sad, or scary. What if death had no power and that death isn’t a bad thing, just a cycle of life and an inevitable act that everyone has to go through? “Death be not proud” by John Donne tries to explain what he thinks about death, almost testing it like it was a person. This quite sombre but anger fuelled sonnet really delves into the poet’s definition of what death really represents to him, and why people shouldn’t fear death since everlasting life after death is something to look forward to. In the first three verses of the second quadraint, John Donne