In the scene following their marriage, we feel increasingly sympathetic towards Juliet as she faces Lord and Lady Capulet, who are insisting in marrying her to Paris “early next Thursday”. A new twist adds to the story when Romeo is banished from Verona after killing Juliet’s cousin, Tybalt. Tybalt and Romeo were caught up in a fight after the member of the Capulets slayed Romeo’s friend, Mercutio. As the audience, we feel sympathetic towards Juliet as she’s helpless and has no power to influence all the events that are taking place. The man she risked her life marrying will no longer be with her as this is their last night before Romeo leaves for Mantua and any chance of being able to reveal her beloved husband’s identity is shattered after Tybalt’s killing as the Capulet family is now more determined then ever on avenging Tybalt’s death.
Romeo and Juliet’s relationship is not even a relationship because they have to sneak around and lie to everybody they love. At the beginning of the story, Romeo claims to be so in love with Rosaline. He says that he cannot find another girl to love and that Rosaline will be the only girl that he’ll ever be able to love. Romeo’s friend Marcuteo tells Romeo that he needs to look for other beauty’s, and Romeo disagrees because he believes that Rosaline is the only women for him. But she could not love Romeo back because she was a nun, and that is against her religion.
Tom’s family dislikes Nola because she is very different from them, money wise. Chris attempts to hide is attraction for Nola but one day she runs out of the house very upset and Chris decides to follow her. They hook up. Chris never tells Chloe and the two of them end up staying together and getting married. Chloe’s father gives Chris a job at the family company and all is well.
In Casablanca, Rick meets the love of his life, the only woman that he had really fallen in love with, they plan to escape together and literally last minute he finds out that she will not meet with him. This leaves Rick with a very bitter feeling towards Ilsa, he doesn’t understand why she didn’t leave with him and he decides to move on with his life accepting that no longer Ilsa will be in the picture. In “From Here to Eternity” a very similar thing takes place, Holmes wife, Karen has an affair with Warden which leads to a very passionate love, eventually she tells him that if he became an officer, she could divorce Holmes and they could leave together to the states to get married. Instead because of Holmes resignation, she leaves with him. Karen then realizes that the chances of her and Warden ending up together are very unlikely.
The King has his daughters compete for their inheritance by judging which one of his daughters can prove to him how much they love him. Now the initial act of betrayal starts with King Lear turning his back on his daughter Cordelia for refusing to have to prove her affection for her father. He immediately disowns her drops his duty as a father. Despite what he did to her, she never stops loving him throughout the play. She is cast into exile while her sisters are appointed power over the land and they begin to rule.
Synopsis of Act II in Romeo and Juliet By Brendan Polson The purpose of this scene is to summarize for the audience Romeo's change of attitude. He used to be depressed because Rosaline was a nun and was going to take the vow of chastity, so he would never be able to be with her. But then he goes to the Capulet party and sees Juliet and instantly falls in love with her. She too thinks he is handsome and likes him. Romeo and Juliet then have to hide their love because of their feuding families that has been going on for centuries.
Jason says “Cypris was alone responsible,” meaning Medea’s falling in love wasn’t natural but wholly caused by a goddess. Jason identifies and applauds Medea’s reasonings of the “attack on [his] wedding,” to persuade her to believe that his getting married to the princess could end happily for everyone. He tries to explain his reasonings of leaving Medea by first listing the reasons he is not leaving her, followed by a shift, and then telling why he is leaving her and how it could be a benefit to not only himself, but to her and the children also. Jason wisely uses logical placements of sequencing words throughout his speech. “Firstly,” “secondly,” and “next” help his argument because they give his speech some order.
“Sexy” also tells the story of a young woman's futile affair with a married man. Miranda is the outsider in her relationship with Dev, secondary to his wife and incapable of living her own life since it revolves solely around the next time they'll meet. Through the innocent words of a young boy who unintentionally makes her realize the futility of her ways, she is driven to examine and re-evaluate what love is, until she is finally ready to let go. The first time they meet at a makeup counter is when Miranda discovers that Dev is a man to watch. She applied different makeups and creams just to stay in his peripherals longer; she had eyes for Dev.
I did love you once. (III.i.111-115) Hamlet promised to marry Ophelia after he took her innocence. He then began to mistreat her and finally … left her. When Hamlet realizes Ophelia’s father caught him in a trap he becomes furious. In fact he becomes so angry that he tells Ophelia that he never loved her and that instead of marrying she should go to a nunnery rather then pass on her genes to children.
The shadow represents sorrow or death. The wall in “The Story of Pyramus and Thisbe” represents their parents never achieving true union with their children. Yet, the wall also represents hope: “… the lovers found the slit and made it/ The hidden mouthpiece where love’s subtle words in sweetest whispers came/ And charmed the ear” (ll. 18-22). Cold, bitter separation for the lovers but, even though their parents forbid them from being together, it only makes the flames of their love burn even hotter, every higher.