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Famous Love Story Allusions in Romeo and Juliet

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Eros/Cupid--God of Love Eros=Greek Root meaning physical love Aphrodite s son Greeks depicted him as a young man; Romans depicted as a young boy Sometimes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Famous Love Story Allusions in Romeo and Juliet


1
Famous Love Story Allusions in Romeo and Juliet
2
A Few Cupid Allusions
  • Well, in that hit you miss. Shell not be hit
    with Cupids arrowFrom Loves week childish bow
    she lives uncharmed (Romeo I, i, 209-212).
  • You are a lover. Borrow Cupids wings and soar
    with them (Mercutio I, iv, 17 18).

3
Eros/Cupid--God of Love
  • ErosGreek Root meaning physical love
  • Aphrodites son
  • Greeks depicted him as a young man Romans
    depicted as a young boy
  • Sometimes considered blind (Hence the saying,
    Love is blind.)
  • Shot special love arrows--gold true love
    lead lust
  • If shot with his arrow, youd fall in love with
    the first person you saw

4
King Cophetua and the Beggar Maid (Mercutio
II, i, 14).
  • Ballad from the Middle Ages
  • King Cophetua was a ruler in Africa
  • Was not interested in women
  • Fell in love at first sight with a beggar lady
    dressed in gray (some say Cupid shot him)
  • Said that if he couldnt have her as his wife he
    would die
  • Married her despite the poverty
  • Some stories say it ended happily others say it
    didnt

5
Echo and Narcissus
  • Bondage is hoarse and may not speak aloud, Else
    would I tear the cave where Echo lies (Juliet
    II, ii, 161 162 )
  • Echo--nymph who could only repeat what others
    said because of a curse from Hera
  • Narcissus--beautiful selfish nymph who vowed to
    never fall in love Echo loved him
  • Narcissus fell in love with his own reflection
    was dying later turned into a flower
  • Echo wasted away in a cave for love of Narcissus

6
Allusions from Mercutios Speech Act 2 Scene 4
  • Without his roe, like a dried herring flesh,
    flesh,
  • how art thou fishified! Now is he for the numbers
  • that Petrarch flowed in Laura to his lady was
    but a
  • kitchen-wench marry, she had a better love to
  • be-rhyme her Dido a dowdy Cleopatra a gipsy
  • Helen and Hero hildings and harlots Thisbe a
    grey
  • eye or so, but not to the purpose. (Mercutio
    Romeo and Juliet, II, iv, 38-44.)

7
Petrarch and Laura
  • Franscico Petrarch lived in the 1300s
  • Father of Humanistic Philosophy and his passion
    for reading and writing helped end the Dark Ages
  • He supposedly fell in love with Laura de Noves at
    first sight, but she was already married.
  • For her, he wrote numerous poems and is
    considered to have perfected the sonnet (a poem
    form that Shakespeare used frequently).
  • His love, Laura, possibly died from the plague
    which also took most of his family and friends
    lives.
  • When asked whether his poems were about Laura De
    Noves, he denied it.

8
Dido and Aeneas
  • Dido, also called Elissa, was princess of Tyre in
    Phoenicia
  • She left Tyre and founded. her own city,
    Cathrage.
  • Aeneas, a hero from the Trojan war, landed on her
    shores.
  • She treated him well and fell in love with him.
  • He spurned her love and left her.
  • She is said to either have burned herself alive,
    or killed herself with Aeneas sword.

Dido preparing to kill herself with Aeneas sword
9
Marc Antony and Cleopatra
  • Queen of Egypt (but was actually Greek)
  • Married to Julius Caesar and had a child with him
  • After Caesars death, Marc Antony went to Egypt,
    fell in love with her and divorced his wife to
    marry her
  • They made plans to conquer Rome
  • Hearing a false report that Cleopatra was dead,
    Antony fell on his sword
  • Cleopatra had a asp (snake) bite her when she
    received the news of Antonys death

10
Helen Who Launched a 1000 Ships Cause of Trojan
War
  • Helen was the most beautiful mortal woman
  • Married to King Menelaus of Sparta
  • Paris, Prince of Troy, met her at a party in
    Sparta and fell in love with her
  • Paris kidnapped her or she went willingly to Troy
  • The Greeks spent 10 years during the Trojan War
    trying to get her back
  • Finally they did and killed most of the Trojans
    (Trojan War)

11
Hero and Leander
  • Hero lived as a priestess of Aphrodite in a
    secluded tower.
  • Leander, who lived across the strait, saw her
    and fell in love with her.
  • Every night he would swim the strait to stay with
    her.
  • One night there was a horrible storm as he swam,
    and he drowned.
  • When Hero found out Leander died, she threw
    herself from her tower into the ocean and died.

12
Thisbe and Pyramus
  • Young neighbors who fell in love
  • Parents forbid the two of them from seeing each
    other.
  • Would talk at night through the wall secretly
  • Decided to sneak off to meet each other near a
    fountain
  • Thisbe got there first and a lioness returning
    from a kill scared her off--she dropped her veil.
  • Pyramus, seeing her veil and the bloody tracks of
    the lion, thought the lionness ate Thisbe.
  • Blaming himself for her death--he stabbed
    himself.
  • Thisbe went back later, saw Pyramus just before
    he died.
  • She then stabbed herself.
  • Their parents buried them in one tomb and planted
    a mulberry tree outside to represent their love
    and the blood that was spilt.

13
Bibliography
  • "Cophetua." Wikipedia. 02/25/08. Wikipedia. 14
    Mar 2008 lthttp//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King_Cophet
    uagt.
  • "Echo and Narcissus in Greek Mythology."
    Mythography. www.loggia.com. 14 Mar 2008
    lthttp//www.loggia.com/myth/echo.htmlgt.
  • "Hero and Leander." Wikipedia. 02/25/08.
    Wikipedia. 14 Mar 2008 lthttp//en.wikipedia.org/wi
    ki/Hero_and_Leandergt.
  • "Pyramus and Thisbe." Wikipedia. 02/26/08.
    Wikipedia. 14 Mar 2008 lthttp//en.wikipedia.org/wi
    ki/Pyramus_and_Thisbegt.
  • Sadlon, Peter. "Laura de Noves." Francesco
    Petrarch and Laura De Noves. 09/10/07. 14 Mar
    2008 lthttp//petrarch.petersadlon.com/gt.
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