I often heard that "division is a very sweet sorrow", but I realized that I do not actually know what it means. Personally for me, dissolution is a very bitter experience, sometimes it allows you to laugh and cry at the same time, hence "sweet sorrow". But I was a bit curious about the real meaning of the playwright, so I searched for them on Google and got more information.
"The poet has long been fascinated by the concept of dialectical feelings - in order to be truly happy, it must be deeply sad first, To enjoy the enjoyment of food, you first get hungry But this grief is so sweet as to remind her of love for him so to say goodbye also causes her to see his expectations again, I made my mood happy. "
"Juliet refers to the pain that lovers have been faced since then since she is very fond of Romeo and she is surprised at how painful it is for her to quit him, so it may be difficult to dissolve It is a pleasure. "
Oh, maybe it is the sweet sorrow of Romeo and Juliet at the time of separation, what Shake Spear had meant at the time. How nice
Of course, sweet sorrow applies not only to the separation of lovers but also to the separation of families and friends. Due to changes in work and lifestyle, we all have to share our share - some of which we have chosen. Others are bitter, but some of these separations need to be a more sweet side, but it is always a mixture of two - or not at all. A sweet separation is by no means painful and a little painless separation is by no means sweet. The sweeter it becomes harder, harder and sweeter. Oh, do not you like public opinion?
I want a good friend, because she pursued a very noble occupation back to Manila, you can actually call it a profession. God speed is deeply rolling. Please do not dissolve but please access Davao again as soon as possible. I can go to the party. (Lol)
Oxymoron: In order to express new meaning and complicated meaning, contradictory words are paired contradictory words. In the words of Romeo and Juliet, "Good-bye is a very sad sorrow", "Sweet sorrow" is a complicated simultaneous pain accompanying passionate love and a contradiction capturing simultaneous pain and joy. Oxymorons are metaphors because their effects come from a combination of two words going beyond the literal meaning of those words. Exaggeration: Exaggeration is a deliberate exaggeration of the facts used to emphasize the importance of something, or to create a comedy effect. An exaggerated example is "heavy to 1 ton" backpack. Actually there is no backpack with a weight of 1 ton, but even if saying "the weight of my backpack is 10 pounds" it will not bear a heavy backpack burden. Again, this is a metaphor. Because the effect comes from the understanding that these words have different meanings from the literal meaning.
According to how to see the first balcony scene of Romeo and Juliet, Juliette's farewell may be "very sweet sorrow". In any case, her words are contradictory and combine contradictory concepts of happiness and pain. Because Juliet likes to use a twisted "gib" (chain or bondage) to fool a lover like a mischievous young man ("long live"), dissolution is sad. It is fun to do something in Romeo, so dissolution may be fun. Please note the potential sadmaismism of this exchange, and the nearly avid forecast that Romeo was killed for too much importance.
Contradictory "sweet sorrow" exacerbated the conflict that Juliet was sad to leave Romeo ("sad") and was excited to see him ("sweet"). It allows a lot of information to be conveyed to the audience in several languages. It allows Juliet 's conflicting emotions to be conveyed to the audience in a very powerful way with just a few words. Romeo and Juliet Shakespeare uses words wisely to influence the audience. He creates images with lively words and phrases, which stimulates viewers' imagination and helps stimulate emotional images. For example, the chorus uses a powerful metaphor to suggest that a lover calls it "starlight" and love "death mark." Shakespeare also uses images to deepen the dramatic effects of a particular moment or mood. All images of Shakespeare use a metaphor, a metaphor or anthropomorphism