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Comparing Lord Capulet In William Shakespeare's Romeo And Juliet

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William Shakespeare, the author of The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, sets his play in the city of Verona, where two star-crossed lovers perish due to a series of intervening characters. One of which includes Lord Capulet, the Patriarch of the Capulet Family, who implicitly induces the five demises that occur throughout the play. Playing a leading role during Juliet’s life, Capulet alters many of Juliet’s intentions and thoughts, such as when Capulet proclaims that “[Juliet] should be married to this noble earl [Paris],” although Juliet declares that she has no deliberation to marry at such a young age (III.iv.22). Furthermore, when Juliet declines Capulet’s suggestion for marriage, he chastises her by calling her a “young baggage” and a “disobedient wretch!” which reveals his malevolence towards his daughter (III.v.160). …show more content…
The deaths that Capulet triggers could have been prevented if Capulet had resolved the feud between the Montagues, resulting in an honest relationship between the two lovers. However, Capulet reveals his detestation towards the Montague family by commanding Lady Capulet to “Give [him his] long sword,” and he further expresses the magnitude of the situation by exclaiming “My sword I say! Old Montague comes” (I.i.65-67). Moreover, if Capulet had educated all of his servants, such as Peter, who Shakespeare characterizes as uneducated and illiterate by having Peter inquire “I pray, sir, can you read?” then Peter would not have run into Romeo and Romeo would never have met Juliet in the first place

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