“Thou wretched boy, that didst consort him here,/ Shalt with him hence” (3.1.126-127). Tybalt still wishes to fight Romeo, because he couldn’t accept letting Romeo go and Romeo couldn’t accept Tybalt’s murder of Mercutio. This leads to Romeo killing Tybalt, and thus Romeo is banished for taking Tybalt’s life. This puts the rest of disaster into motion, and eventually leads to the death of Romeo and Juliet. Tybalt instigating the fight between him, Mercutio, and Romeo is what brought upon the rest of the events causing Romeo and Juliet’s…
Tybalt Dies Yesterday night, tragedy strikes as the Capulets and the Montagues shocked the citizens of Verona as their brawl, which was taken to the streets by the large fountain, left Tybalt Capulet with a terrible death and the exile of Romeo Montague. The residents were also devastated for the death of Mercutio Escalus, close friend to Romeo Montague and cousin to the Prince of Verona. Tybalt Capulet was found lying dead in the fountain with two bullet holes in the chest.…
Tybalt is shown here as having a lack of self-temper, by having the desire to kill Romeo on the spot. Later in the story, Tybalt is shown as having another hasty want, to cause a fight or brawl. “You shall find me apt enough to that, sir, and you will give me occasion” (Shakespeare 426). Tybalt then continues to duel a beloved friend of Romeo’s, Mercutio, and in the end kills him. Romeo, enraged by this outcome, runs after the new murderer, and Tybalt receives the same ending as Mercutio.…
Begging for your forgiveness, I must ask that you do not end my life to avenge good Mercutio. If thou spareith me, I shall return to Verona as a peaceful man, ready to diminish the strife between the Capulets and Montagues. The quarrel between our families has spanned centuries, and I know not why. The fighting between our kinsman truly takes a toll on our lives.…
Mercutio is wounded by Tybalt, and Mercutio dies do to his wounds. After Mercutio is dead, Romeo gets angry and he fights and kills Tybalt. Romeo goes to Friar Laurence for advice after the fight. Friar Laurence tells him he is banished from Verona forever. If Tybalt were never to approach Romeo asking to fight him, Romeo would be in Verona with his wife Juliet living a happy life.…
So tybalt told mercutio will you draw, in other words fight or fence. Mercutio said yes, so there were fighting but mercutio didn't take it serious so he was killed by tybalt. Later romeo found out that tybalt had killed mercutio. Romeo went after tybalt and then battled him for revenge of mercutio. Romeo killed tybalt in battle, which is a bad thing because it will just start more problems between the capulets and the montagues.…
Romeo acted unreasonably when he tried to fight Tybalt saying “Alive in triumph, and Mercutio slain! . . . Either thou or I, or both must go with him (3.1.123).” Romeo acted completely unreasonably trying to kill him. Tybalt would of been in trouble for killing Mercutio, the prince’s kinsman and sent to death or banished. Also Romeo when joining the two men talking, Romeo went on about how he loved Tybalt saying “I do protest I never injured thee but love thee better than thou canst devise till then shalt know the reason of my love (3.1.119).”…
At Capulet’s party, I was roaming around and making sure that everything was perfect, but then I heard a familiar voice. I followed that voice and found the Montague, Romeo. He had a mask on, but I was sure that it was him. I told a slave to fetch me my sword, while I went to go find my uncle, Capulet. I told him that I saw Romeo, but he acted as if he did not even care.…
By making a reasonable decision, the play could have ended with the “pair of star-cross’d lovers” living happily ever after. This shows that Romeo’s emotions lead to his death and the death of Juliet when she wakes up seeing Romeo. Next, Romeo’s anger made him slain Tybalt because Tybalt slain Mercutio, who was a friend of Romeo’s. Romeo was banished from the city because of his crime which separated him from Juliet. In the play, Romeo says, “Tybalt, take the villain back again/Either thou, or I, or both, must go with him” (3.1.124-128).…
Emotions are something that we feel each and every day. Our emotions for others change who we are, and our acts towards them. If we enjoy the presence of a person we feel happy, excited, and joyful; however, if we dislike the presence of a person we feel hatred, despair, and violence. A strong emotion that we all feel once in a while is hatred, especially hatred for another. Hatred for another makes people forget who they are and treat people differently.…
He restraints from having to touch Tybalt until Mercutio is killed by Tybalt. His love for Mercutio, overtakes and he goes into a rage, killing Tybalt. To understand love we must understand hate, Romeo makes sacrifices and does not allow his love to be overshadowed by hatred, even when killing Tybalt, he killed to avenge his friend Mercutio out of pure…
Romeo kills Tybalt just a couple of hours after Tybalt kills Mercutio. This immediately results in Romeo getting banished and causes him and Juliet to be separated. Romeo could hardly live with this “There is no world without Verona walls, But purgatory, torture, hell itself. Hence-banished is banish'd from the world, And world's exile is death: then banished, Is death mis-term'd: calling death banishment, Thou cutt'st my head off with a golden axe, And smilest upon the stroke that murders me.”(3.3) Basically, to Romeo, living without Juliet was like eternal damnation.…
Zayd Siddiqui Mr. Devine ENG 1D1 Jan/8/16 Causes For Romeo And Juliet’s Death “From Forth the fatal loins of these two foes, a pair of star-crossed lovers take their lives”. Romeo and Juliet is an 16th Century play written by William Shakespeare. The Play Portraits the life of two star-crossed lovers as they live hiding their love in fear and secret from their feuding families, the Capulets and the Montagues. This Path ultimately leads to the two lover’s horrible death, but what were the factors and events leading up to this ending?…
The Montague versus Capulet feud is an ongoing theme in the play that eventually leads to Romeo and Juliet’s deaths. There is tension between the Capulet and Montague families throughout the play that evolves much more violently. Tybalt is a constant aggressor from the Capulet side of the feud, who will never turn down a chance to initiate or partake in a Capulet versus Montague altercation. The development of the Montague versus Capulet vendetta is what leads Tybalt to fight Romeo. Tybalt is “slain by young Romeo” (3. 1. 144) in the end.…
The conflict between Juliet and her parents causes her marriage to Paris to be set a day earlier than expected, which is due to her father’s lack of faith in her obedience. The Friar’s letter, sent a day early, causes confusion for the two lovers, and is ultimately the cause of Juliet and Romeo’s tragic demise. Equally, Romeo’s change of identity and the following conflicts contributed to his own death, but were more so the cause of the deaths of Mercutio and Tybalt. By bringing out Mercutio’s hot-headedness, and stepping between the two in order to enforce his new love for the Capulets, he gives chance for Tybalt to “… [hit] the life / Of stout Mercutio, and then Tybalt [flees]; / But by and by comes back to Romeo, / Who [has] but newly entertain’d revenge, /…