What Do We Learn About Juliet's Relationship with Her Father from Act 3: Scene 5

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What Do We Learn About Juliet’s Relationship with Her Father from Act 3: Scene 5?

Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet tells the tragedy of two ‘star-crossed lovers,’ who are divided by feuding families but united by love.  For many years, an on-going feud between these two families has caused much disruption in the city of Verona, Italy. The play takes place in the city of Verona and Mantua, Italy, over the course of five short days. Verona is the home of the Capulet and Montague families and Mantua is where Romeo is banished. Italy was seen as an immoral country, famous for sexual affairs and violent crimes, many playwrights including ones completed by Shakespeare are set here. The length of the play consists of five acts containing twenty-four scenes, which is the same in various other plays written by Shakespeare. He wrote this play in five acts in order to introduce new ideas, characters, setting and basic situations. It helps develop the main plot of the play and it helps to introduce complications and incidents.

The structure of the play itself is the fate from which Romeo and Juliet cannot escape. In that time, people were very wary of the stars. If two people’s stars were crossed in the sky, they would never remain together. Obviously, Romeo and Juliet didn’t live happily ever after.

Shakespeare’s audience already knew the story of Romeo and Juliet, a popular story which Arthur Brooke had translated into English in 1562 as a poem called The Tragicall Historye of Romeus and Juliet. One feature that is different from the original poem is that Shakespeare introduced two characters to the play, the Nurse and Mercutio in order to create entertainment, humour and light heartedness.

Romeo and Juliet was written in the Elizabethan Period which meant women were treated unfairly. Capulet’s relationship with Juliet reflects how life was like in the Elizabethan Period. Women in the 1500’s were clearly subordinate to the men meaning that they had complete power over everything. They were considered to be ‘inferior’ beings who were controlled by their husbands, fathers, or by any other men in the family. Life for women was one without any grand opportunities. They had no control over their own lives and their education was to learn how to be a domestic goddess meaning they would have to cook, clean and wash for the men. They had no voice in the society; it wouldn’t matter to anyone because men were the primary figures in the society. Women were property of the men until they were married and they weren’t allowed to hold their own views or lifestyle. This kind of society in the Elizabethan Era was called patriarchal suggesting that men were the leading figures making all the decisions about money, children, women, law and various social status decisions.

Lord Capulet, a wealthy, loving and leading character plays two roles: the father of Juliet and the head of the Capulet family in Verona. He has the significant job of arranging the marriage for his daughter and finding a suitable husband who has high status, wealth and is intelligent. His love for his daughter is shown in the play especially in the way that he does what he feels is best for her. However, the major contributor to the downfall of Romeo and Juliet was Lord Capulet, Juliet's own father. He brought upon the death of Juliet by forcing her to marry Paris, separating her from Romeo, and rejecting her. Capulet didn't care about how she felt and forced her to marry Paris which caused problems that led to her tragic fate.

The prologue states that the ‘star-crossed lovers take their life.’ As the play progresses, there are many subtle clues that confirm the fact that Romeo and Juliet will die. This is the device known as foreshadowing. Foreshadowing is the use of symbols to show what will happen in the future. An example in the play that demonstrates foreshadowing is when Romeo had a bad feeling before the Capulet party in Act 1: Scene 4 ‘With this night's revels and expire the term, Of a despised life closed in my breast, By some vile forfeit of untimely death.’ There are many more examples in the rest of the play because Shakespeare uses this literary device for the audience to get a feel of what will happen later. The final line in scene 5 of Act 3, ‘If all else fail, myself have power to die,’ foreshadows Juliet’s suicide. Since her mother and father have finished with her, she can either marry Paris which will result in unhappiness or she can try to find Romeo but that is almost impossible because he is banished.

When Paris first asks for Juliet’s hand in marriage, Capulet is initially reluctant to give his consent mainly because she is too young and hasn’t yet matured. This is portrayed in the line, ‘Let two more summers wither in their pride,’ this is a metaphor which Capulet says to Paris to wait two more years to marry Juliet because he feels that she is not ready to be a married woman yet. In this patriarchal Society, the father of a daughter has to decide who she married. Capulet treats Juliet as his own possession; his primary job is to find a suitable husband for her. Capulet’s reaction to Paris’s proposal to Juliet is that he feels she hasn’t matured and he is very protective of her as a child. He is overly-cautious in the way that she might not be ready to marry. On the other hand, he wants his daughter to be happy. He solves his problem for the time being by advising Paris to woo Juliet at the feast, and saying ‘My will to her consent is but a part,’ which means that even if he agrees to the marriage, Juliet has the final say. Unforgettably, his power to force her into a marriage is always present.

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Although Capulet seems to look out for Juliet’s best interests, Juliet’s position is clearly subordinate to Capulet, meaning that she will not pick who she marries, Capulet will. Capulet and Paris decide on the marriage mainly because they both will attain a high social status and will achieve more wealth. Capulet wants this marriage to be a big social gathering to gain more popularity in the Capulet household. At this time, he is feeling weak and emotional so therefore he feels that this social gathering will cheer him and Juliet up. Wedding celebrations at this time was intended to ...

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