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  1. Because of their impulsive, last-ditch effort at preserving their love, Romeo and Juliet have forfeited the opportunity to enjoy that same love and to experience the resulting peace from the feud's end.

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  3. At the end of Romeo and Juliet, Romeo returns to Verona because he believes Juliet is dead. When he arrives at her tomb she appears lifeless, and in his grief he kills himself by drinking poison. Moments later Juliet wakes, and, finding Romeo dead, she plunges his sword into her breast.

  4. Jul 31, 2015 · The friar will send Romeo word to be at her family tomb when she awakes. The plan goes awry, and Romeo learns instead that she is dead. In the tomb, Romeo kills himself. Juliet wakes, sees his body, and commits suicide. Their deaths appear finally to end the feud. Prologue

  5. Romeo and Juliet are dead, and their parents will mourn them for the rest of their lives—all because of their silly feud. Just as the chorus predicted, Romeo and Juliet’s tragic deaths were the wake-up call their parents needed in order to at last put an end to their “ancient grudge.”

  6. Faced with danger, Sampson the outlaw wants to be on the right side of the law. The feud creates turmoil in Verona, turmoil which Prince Escalus has to deal with. When the Prince breaks up the riot of the first scene, he is enraged by the unnatural violation of civic order.

  7. The Prince arrives at the scene and, after hearing the story of Romeo and Juliet’s love, orders that the Montagues and Capulets end their feud.

  8. Give me thy torch, boy. Hence and stand aloof. Yet put it out, for I would not be seen. Under yond yew trees lay thee all along, Holding thy ear close to the hollow ground. So shall no foot upon the churchyard tread 5. (Being loose, unfirm, with digging up of graves) But thou shalt hear it. Whistle then to me.

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