When partners are faced with inconvenient problems, they would work together to solve it in any way possible. Romeo and Juliet do not face their difficuilties together. They feel their only way out of a tough situation that they both are undergoing, is suicide. In Act 3 Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet, Romeo states: “Hadst thou no poison mix'd, no sharp-ground knife, No sudden mean of death, though ne'er so mean, But 'banished' to kill me?--'banished'?” Within this quote, Romeo is basically asking the Friar if he has poison, a knife, or any other way of death that would be more suitable than being banished and …show more content…
When Juliet and Romeo felt they were in love, they were very young and did not understand the difference between love and infatuation. Both Romeo and Juliet felt suicide was their way out of their issues, they rarely talked to get to know each other, and lastly, Romeo put his hatred towards Juliets own cousin before thinking about his own wife and what he could get into. Some may think they were in love due to both of them killing themselves over one another, but in reality, Romeo and Juliet should have thought of staying alive for their other halves. This is because they would want to keep their marriage and their legacy as “Romeo and Juliet” in