The role of Romeo Montagu in William Shakespeare's 'Romeo and Juliet' is one of the protagonists of Shakespearean play "Romeo and Juliet" and is portrayed as a tragic person guided by his fate. Shakespeare introduced Romeo first as a romantic sentimentist who was absorbed in his own emotions. However, Romeo lost these personality traits at the end of the script and became more mature after falling in love with Juliet. Shakespeare shows this vividly through a dramatic visual moment in the play and eventually leads to the tragic climax of Romeo's suicide.
William Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet are the two star lovers of Romeo and Juliet. They come from two competing families. Romeo's role comes from a role called Montague and Juliet, if William Shakespeare comes from Capret, William Shakespeare will make these families very similar in respect of dignity. - Keats 'Greek people of Greece' provides conflicting aesthetic concepts. It explains that frozen beauty depicted in a pot is sweeter than reality, as its expiration date is impossible to lock. Lover's kiss is sweeter than waiting, and her eternal beauty and devotion is impossible to kiss. Therefore, the observation of beauty is sweeter than its tolerance, the purpose of their heyday is the best before it expires.
Romeo Montagu (Italian: Romeo Montechi) is the protagonist of William Shakespeare's tragic "Romeo and Juliet's tragedy". Lord Montague's son and his wife, Mrs Montague, secretly loved, married Juliet, a member of the rival's Capulet, and handed a priest named Friar Laurence. After Romeo murdered Juliet's cousin Timbert in a battle, he was forced to exile. Origin of the character can be traced back to Pyramus which appeared in the metamorphosis of Ovid, but Romeo's first contemporary body was Mariotto, 33rd in Il Novellino (1476) of Masuccio Salernitano. This story was adapted to Juliette Romeo (Juliet Romeo (published in 1531)) by Luigi da Porto in 1524. Da Porto named the letter Romeo Montecchi whose story is almost the same as Shakespeare's adaptation.