1980. A
recurring theme in literature is the classic war between a passion and
responsibility. For instance, a personal cause, a love, a desire for revenge, a
determination to redress a wrong, or some other emotion or drive may conflict
with moral duty. Choose a literary work in which a character confronts the
demands of a private passion that conflicts with his or her responsibilities.
In a well-written essay show clearly the nature of the conflict, its effects
upon the character, and its significance to the work.
Shakespeare’s
characters Romeo and Juliet in his play Romeo
and Juliet both face the internal war of deciding between passion for each
other or responsibility to their family. Romeo’s family, the Montagues, and Juliet’s
family, the Capulets, have been in a long standing feud that affects the entire
city of Verona because of the constant duels and deaths between the families. It
is in this atmosphere that Romeo and Juliet’s secret forbidden love begins to
blossom and the war between passion and responsibility begins. The war has many
battles in that there are many situations where both Romeo and Juliet have to
decide which side to take, passion or family responsibility?
Once Romeo
and Juliet realize they are in love with someone from the house of their family’s
enemy, they both are incredibly shocked and upset. It causes both of the
characters distress to have gone against their family and they are both
conflicted with what to do. This is the first time they face the decision of
choosing passion over their responsibility to family. At this point, passion
wins out, and Romeo and Juliet secretly get married, complicating the plot even
more due to the secrecy.
Soon, Tybalt and Romeo meet and
Tybalt wants to fight causing Romeo to again have to make a decision between
passion or responsibility. Tybalt is now Romeo’s family member, although it isn’t
known to anyone yet. According to his family’s expectations, he needs to fight
Tybalt because he is part of the enemy family. But, if he did fight Tybalt, it
would hurt his Juliet’s feelings because that is her family. Again, passion
wins out and Romeo tries to avoid a fight with his new relative Tybalt.
Julie hears later that Romeo
has killed one of her family members and has to decide between her love for
Romeo or her family. If she picks love, she would forgive Romeo, but if she
picks her responsibility to her family, she would leave him for committing this
act against her family. Passion wins out yet again as Juliet makes the difficult
decision and picks Romeo and therefore decides to forgive him.
As the play goes on, the two
characters continue to face many situations where they have to decide whether
to choose their love for one another or their family. Each time, passion wins
out, which seems to show that in conflicts where passion is one option, it
always wins. Having the characters go through this type of internal conflict
time and time again builds up suspense in the audience as they are watching the
play, making them wonder if the characters will continue to choose passion over
responsibility, or if they finally had enough. Also, it constantly reminds the
audience of the difficult decision and the sacrifices Romeo and Juliet had to
face in order to make their marriage and love work and it really emphasizes
their love for each other. In conclusion, the famous tragic lovers Romeo and
Juliet go through the classic war between passion and responsibility found in
many classical pieces of literature.
Hi Tulsi! This is a really good example of passion vs. responsibility. Romeo and Juliet really do choose passion every single time even though it's always a difficult decision. Even in the end, though it shows the consequences of passion over responsibility, the two are at least still together forever. I wonder if this is still how they would have chosen it to be if they knew their fate. Or... would they have let responsibility win (and give in to their families) if they knew their passion for each other would ultimately lead to death for the both of them? I think that would be the real answer to which one wins: passion or responsibility.
ReplyDeleteHey Tulsi, good response! I liked how you had several examples from Romeo and Juliet of when the characters had to choose between passion and responsibility. The last paragraph was centerpiece of the whole essay explaining the conflict's significance to the work and effect to the characters. One suggestion I could make would be to explain these two parts each time you reference an example so you answer the prompt in each paragraph. Otherwise, great essay!
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