forthegothicheroine:

That Hamlet post reminds me, people blame Romeo and Juliet for “getting everyone killed”, but the text itself very specifically blames the lords Capulet and Montague. If you want to get to the nitty gritty:

  1. Mercutio got himself killed. Romeo was very specifically trying to not have a swordfight, and Mercutio decided to start one because he thought Romeo was being a pussy. Tybalt actually killed him, but if you’re talking about who “got him killed,” that was Mercutio fucking around and finding out.
  2. Romeo killed Tybalt. This is the one death that I think you can reasonably lay at Romeo’s feet. If he had run off with Benvolio and got the Prince’s men, Tybalt would have been arrested. That said, if my best friend (no matter how stupid) was killed right in front of me and the killer told me that friend sucked and so did I, I cannot guarantee I would do differently.
  3. Lady Capulet said she hired people to kill Romeo. He beat them to the punch on that, but I think it should be pointed out.
  4. Romeo killed Paris in self-defense. There’s a lot of different ways you can play this, and Paris did think he’d broken in to vandalize the tomb of his girlfriend, but once again Romeo specifically begged someone not to fight him and that wasn’t enough.
  5. Romeo killed himself because he thought Juliet was dead. Friar Lawrence had a stupid idea and Juliet followed through on it because her father was going to force her into bigamy (and arguably marital rape), so if anyone “got” this to happen it was Lord Capulet.
  6. Juliet killed herself because her husband was dead, her cousin was dead, her parents had turned on her, the woman who she thought of as a second mother abandoned her, and she was in a room with one guy stabbed and another guy poisoned right as the law was about to break in. Once again, I don’t know what I’d do in her situation.

My Shakespeare professor said that Romeo and Juliet is the only Shakespeare tragedy not caused because of anyone being evil- Lord Capulet and Tybalt (and Mercutio) are dicks, but they’re not Iago or Richard III. None of them wanted the play to end in a pile of bodies. You can’t even point to one specific act and say ‘that was the specific action that caused all of this.’ It’s a surprisingly modern (as opposed to mythic) play in that regard.