Fate is a major theme of the play, and Romeo's words illustrate the theme of fate.
We know this from the play's prologue, where we are told that Romeo and Juliet are "star-crossed." in the prologue we are told that the two were fated to fall in love and die. Thus, their fate is not only to love, but also to die.
Romeo, however, believes only that they were fated to love. That's why, when he finds Juliet "dead," he says that he "defies" the stars, or rejects fate. He believes that fate wants to keep them apart; in defying fate, he kills himself and will be with Juliet forever. (He does not stop to think that perhaps his death was "fated" too.)
Some people from the age of Frederick Douglass believed that black people had less intellectual capabilities than white people and were therefore biologically determined to be worth less, which is why they should be slaves. Frederick Douglass was an abolitionist who fought against such prejudice and ignorance.
<span>h stands for height of head . It says the body is two more than 14 times the length of the head so you multiply h by 14 then add two</span>