Light/Dark Imagery
One of the play’s most consistent
visual motifs is the contrast between light and dark, often in terms of
night/day imagery. This contrast is not given a particular metaphoric
meaning—light is not always good, and dark is not always evil. On the contrary,
light and dark are generally used to provide a sensory contrast and to hint at
opposed alternatives. One of the more important instances of this motif is
Romeo’s lengthy meditation on the sun and the moon during the balcony scene, in
which Juliet, metaphorically described as the sun, is seen as banishing the
“envious moon” and transforming the night into day (2.1.46). A similar blurring
of night and day occurs in the early morning hours after the lovers’ only night
together. Romeo, forced to leave for exile in the morning, and Juliet, not
wanting him to leave her room, both try to pretend that it is still night, and
that the light is actually darkness: “More light and light, more dark and dark
our woes” (3.5.36).
Opposite Points of View
Shakespeare includes numerous
speeches and scenes in Romeo and Juliet that hint at alternative ways to
evaluate the play. Shakespeare uses two main devices in this regard: Mercutio
and servants. Mercutio consistently skewers the viewpoints of all the other
characters in play: he sees Romeo’s devotion to love as a sort of blindness
that robs Romeo from himself; similarly, he sees Tybalt’s devotion to honor as
blind and stupid. His punning and the Queen Mab speech can be interpreted as
undercutting virtually every passion evident in the play. Mercutio serves as a
critic of the delusions of righteousness and grandeur held by the characters
around him.
Where Mercutio is a nobleman who
openly criticizes other nobles, the views offered by servants in the play are
less explicit. There is the Nurse who lost her baby and husband, the servant
Peter who cannot read, the musicians who care about their lost wages and their
lunches, and the Apothecary who cannot afford to make the moral choice, the
lower classes present a second tragic world to counter that of the nobility.
The nobles’ world is full of grand tragic gestures. The servants’ world, in
contrast, is characterized by simple needs, and early deaths brought about by
disease and poverty rather than dueling and grand passions. Where the nobility
almost seem to revel in their capacity for drama, the servants’ lives are such
that they cannot afford tragedy of the epic kind.
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