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"My only love sprung from my only hate
"Too early seen unknown, and known too late!"
If you now continue Juliet's thoughts;
"Prodigious birth of love it is to me
"That I must love a loath-ed enemy", mirrors the sonnet which Chorus opens the play with,
Line 4 onwards;
"From forth the fatal loins of these two foes
"A pair of star-cross'd lovers take their life."
This is Juliet's prophesy of an almost immediate death!. Falling in love with the hated enemy Montague, and he with a Capulet, spelt open war in Verona!
"Two households, both alike in dignity
"In fair Verona where we lay our scene.
"From ancient grudge, break to new mutiny
"Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean".
Chorus is laying the scene for us, of the bitterest rivalry between the two powerful houses of Montague and Capulet, street fighting starts the play, ending only with a very powerful lord, Escalus, Prince of Verona, smacking down the two magnates of the respective houses in no uncertain terms, which does virtually nothing to assuage the enmity, raised again by Tybalt hearing the voice of Romeo, A Montague, in the house of Capulet!
The play lurches to its final death scenes, seemingly in headlong flight, (the play is of a four day period), ending again with Escalus delivering the final epitaph,
"For never was a story of more woe
"Than this of Juliet, and her Romeo".
"Too early seen unknown, and known too late!"
If you now continue Juliet's thoughts;
"Prodigious birth of love it is to me
"That I must love a loath-ed enemy", mirrors the sonnet which Chorus opens the play with,
Line 4 onwards;
"From forth the fatal loins of these two foes
"A pair of star-cross'd lovers take their life."
This is Juliet's prophesy of an almost immediate death!. Falling in love with the hated enemy Montague, and he with a Capulet, spelt open war in Verona!
"Two households, both alike in dignity
"In fair Verona where we lay our scene.
"From ancient grudge, break to new mutiny
"Where civil blood makes civil hands unclean".
Chorus is laying the scene for us, of the bitterest rivalry between the two powerful houses of Montague and Capulet, street fighting starts the play, ending only with a very powerful lord, Escalus, Prince of Verona, smacking down the two magnates of the respective houses in no uncertain terms, which does virtually nothing to assuage the enmity, raised again by Tybalt hearing the voice of Romeo, A Montague, in the house of Capulet!
The play lurches to its final death scenes, seemingly in headlong flight, (the play is of a four day period), ending again with Escalus delivering the final epitaph,
"For never was a story of more woe
"Than this of Juliet, and her Romeo".