What Are Romeo's Impulsive Decisions

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To act hastily means to be acting with urgency without thinking beforehand. In William Shakespeare's play Romeo and Juliet, Romeo develops the theme that those who make decisions based on emotion leads to others downfall. Shakespeare demonstrates Romeo's impulsive decisions when he attends the Capulet party when he attempts to stop the fight between Mercutio and Tybalt and when Romeo buys poison from the apothecary.

Romeo's hasty decisions are first shown when he decides to attend the Capulet's party even though he was not invited. The Capulet's invite Mercutio and Benvolio and Romeo go along with them after the Capulet's servant wants them to read the invite list and invited them not knowing that Romeo is a Montague. Romeo observes on the guest list the name of his love; Rosaline. Romeo states “I'll go along no such sight to be shown, but also to rejoice in splendour of mine own”
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Romeo discovers that Juliet is dead and he wants to be with her. Romeo then visits an apothecary and begs “Let me have a dram of poison” (5.1.59-60). The young Montague believes that Juliet is dead and does not have the will to live without her. He buys deadly poison to put himself out of his misery. Romeo travels to the Capulet tomb to spend his last living moments with the women he loves before they can spend eternity together in their afterlife. Romeo arrives at the tomb and enters. He drinks the poison and cries “O true apothecary! Thy drugs are quick. Thus with a kiss. I die” (5.3.119-120). Juliet wakes up only to discover the man of her dreams is dead. She then takes Romeo’s dagger and states “This is thy sheath [Stabs herself]; there rust, and let me die” (5.3.169-170). Juliet cannot live without Romeo so she puts herself out of her misery by killing herself to be with Romeo in the afterlife. Romeo’s hasty action to buy poison led to his downfall, but also the downfall of