Dex-chan lover
- Joined
- Dec 21, 2020
- Messages
- 137
They still have the tent and the entire dayMissed opportunity to warm each other up with their body heat.
They still have the tent and the entire dayMissed opportunity to warm each other up with their body heat.
There's some truth in that, but we have to remember that Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy as much as it's a romance. I think it's a cautionary tale about getting love-drunk and the terrible places it can lead. Love is beautiful, but there are a lot more beautiful things in life besides, and the youthful foolishness of Romeo and Juliet prevented them from experiencing all that life has to offer, including other kinds of romance. Besides that, I also remember Juliet being sort of dragged along and egged on by Romeo, but I last read the text in high school so I don't remember enough to actually cite anything to justify that interpretation. I just remember having that interpretation.Death can be lonely... dying with the person you love isn't, it means your feelings and emotions remain pure, unspoiled to other eventuality. That's what makes it romantic.
If you study the definition of love by people like Shakespeare: love is the union of true minds, unaffected by external forces, it can not be severed (not even by death)... an example of it is Romeo and Juliet.
Now think about what Kou said, if he is turned into a vampire it would mean their love is one sided, or that he is meant to eventually forget his past like any other vampire has done. Their kin will eventually move on, like the relationship between parents and children (someone said that and I can't remember who was). We do have a few exceptions to that, there are a few still in love with their progenitors thought out the series, but not the main vampires... not the old ones. Could you say under that definition they had true love?
Mahiru's and Kuki's death is an example of this. Two individuals that are so desperately in love that even the concept of death doesn't deterred them from seeking such love. In their particular case, Kiku was on her way out either way, Mahiru staying with her is beautiful because, he actively chose to stay with her.
reading this with "moonline" of tsukihime remake in the background make me feel sad as fuck
So what happens if instead of blood they share a different fluid?my guess is that she somehow becomes a human. no idea how. but i feels it
I think you are misunderstanding what I meant.If Kou and Nazuna had a lover's suicide at the end of the story, I believe it would call into question the narrative purpose of the entire Mahiru/Kiku arc, and I would be left wondering what Kotoyama was trying to say. That even healthy romance is impossible, if you have different enough needs?
It doesn't seem, it's confirmed. There are only 4 chapters left.Yea i kinda feel like the ending might be coming up here soon