![]() ![]() Montague, too, seems deeply uninterested in learning about Romeo’s inner emotional life-he knows his son is, at the start of the play, struggling with feelings of unrequited love, but has not bothered to get to the heart of his troubles. The Montagues, too, are guilty of shirking their duties to their son- Lady Montague is concerned about Romeo being seen brawling in the streets but doesn’t actually bother to keep track of her son’s wellbeing or whereabouts. ![]() When Juliet fakes her own death and Capulet mourns her loss in loud, ridiculous, florid terms, Friar Laurence chides him for his hypocrisy-while Juliet was alive, “the most sought was her promotion”-now that she is dead and in heaven, the friar points out, she has received the greatest social “promotion” of all. Though Capulet insists that Juliet is the most important thing in his life, it is clear from his behavior that he (and Lady Capulet, as well) are interested only in impressing their fellow citizens, marrying Juliet to a man who will improve their family’s social standing, and keeping under wraps the very scandals and brawls with the Montagues that they themselves stoke. The Capulets are more concerned with throwing gaudy feasts that will draw the envy and attention of all their friends than they are with nurturing their own family. Shakespeare also points out just how profoundly the Capulets and Montagues fail their children by honoring their desires for social climbing and political advancement. Shakespeare shows that it is the very fact that Romeo and Juliet’s love is forbidden which spurs their passion-as young teenagers, they long to get in trouble and defy their families, and marrying one another is the ultimate transgression against their parents’ wills. As Romeo and Juliet secretly conspire to shirk that duty, surrender to their love for each other, and marry in great haste, Shakespeare points out the ridiculousness of feuds and grudges like the one between the Capulets and Montagues-ancient resentments whose root cause no one alive can even remember. Of course, Romeo and Juliet are not, as individuals, each other’s enemies-but the codes of honor their parents have thrust upon them demand that they hate one another simply out of duty. Romeo and Juliet are bound to honor their families’ hatred of one another-when each learns who the other is after falling in love at a party at the Capulets’ home, they are crestfallen to realize that they are enemies by default. While a child’s honor-bound duty to his or her parent is complex, to say the least, in the world of Hamlet and King Lear, in Romeo and Juliet, it is portrayed outrightly as an absurd, punitive, and even cruel demand. In Romeo and Juliet, however, Shakespeare turns this interrogation on its head. Many of Shakespeare’s works examine the duty children and younger generations within a family owe their parents, or the older generation-in Hamlet, King Lear, and The Merchant of Venice, for example, Shakespeare interrogates filial duty, familial honor, and the difficulties of seeing a parent’s will through. ![]() Romeo and Juliet are bound by duty to honor their respective families, but as their love for one another deepens and their families’ violence towards each other escalates, Shakespeare shows that parents owe their children the duties of respect, openness, and kindness-not exclusively, as the Capulets and Montagues demand, the other way around. The source of the age-old fight between the two families is never explained or even hinted at-all that is clear is that these houses loathe each other and will leap at any chance to do violence unto each other, much to the dismay of Verona’s citizens. Though the forbidden love between Romeo and Juliet lives at the heart of the play and drives much of its action, their love is only forbidden in the first place due to the “ancient grudge,” or feud, between the noble houses of Capulet and Montague. ![]()
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