Juliet, in particular, by the decisions of the men around them. i mean, julie it is so sheltered. this is a girl who only believes her parents had to go to church. this is a girl who doesn t seem to know anybody in her city. she s painfully isolated. i think this is a reading before romance. the play was always hugely successful in shakespeare s day. but i think it was understood far more as a tragedy, as a shocking play, rather than a vision of any kind of aspirational love story. jeff, one particularly memorable moment from the play is a warning from fryer lawrence to romeo. these violent delights have violent ends, and in a triumph die, like fire and powder. which as they kiss consume. the sweetest honey is load some in its own deliciousness. and in the taste, confound the appetite. therefore, love moderately. long love dot so.
Handle our children shift from subjects who we can control and protect, into self determining adults who are frequently horny. and third, what happens when children with poor skills of emotional problem solving, which stuff is talking, about have easy access to lethal weapons. fourth, what are the prospects for social reform after partisan politics lead to the death of children? well said. dr. duncan, in your book, i want to go forward what you just said. he said it wasn t a romantic ending, it was a mess. in your book, searching for julia, you know that juliet dies because, in your words, quote, a series of bad decisions made by men, romeo kills tibet, which leads to his banishment. her father emotionally abuses her and accelerates her forced, bigamist marriage. these events prompt fryer lawrence s chaotic and ultimately derailed plan. this is not a typical reading