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Romeo and
Juliet (an Early Tragedy)
In Verona, Sampson and Gregory (Capulet
servants) complain that they will not
put up with insults from the Montague
family. Abram and Balthasar (Montague
servants) appear and the four start
quarreling. Benvolio (Lord Montague's
nephew) appears and tries to break up
the quarrel, but Tybalt (Lady Capulet's
nephew) appears and picks a fight with
Benvolio. At length, officers try to
break up the fight, even while Lord
Capulet and Lord Montague begin to fight
one another. The Prince of Verona (Escalus)
appears and stops the fighting,
proclaiming sentences of death to any
that renew the fighting. At Montague's
house, he, his wife, and Benvolio
discuss how melancholy Romeo (Montague's
only son) has been lately. Benvolio vows
to find out why. Speaking with Romeo,
Benvolio finds Romeo is in love with a
woman who has sworn to stay chaste
(Rosaline). Benvolio suggests pursuing
other women, but Romeo refuses.
Separately, Paris (a kinsman of the
Prince of Verona) talks to Lord Capulet
about wooing his daughter Juliet for
marriage. Capulet responds that she is
too young (nearly 14 years old) and must
wait two years to marry, and then only
to the man whom she chooses. Still,
Capulet invites Paris to a party in the
evening. Capulet's servant is sent to
invite guests, but he can't read the
list so he entreats Romeo to do so. Upon
hearing of the party, Benvolio convinces
Romeo to attend and compare his
unattainable love Rosaline to more
beautiful women to get his mind off
Rosaline. At Capulet's house, Lady
Capulet speaks to Juliet about her
feelings for marrying Paris while
Juliet's Nurse listens on, telling
stories of Juliet's childhood. Juliet,
although hesitant, promises to be
courteous. Masked, Romeo, Mercutio, and
Benvolio head to the Capulet party.
Romeo is still depressed, saying he
dreamt a fearful dream of an untimely
death that will result because of the
evening's events, but Benvolio just
makes fun of him. At Capulet's house,
the Montagues attend the party (in
masks), Romeo spies Juliet, and he falls
in love with her. Tybalt sees Romeo and
takes up arms, but Lord Capulet attempts
to calm him, though Tybalt vows to
revenge Romeo's intrusion the next day.
Juliet, too, falls for Romeo, but falls
into despair when her Nurse informs her
Romeo is a Montague, as does Romeo when
he learns Juliet is a Capulet.

While
leaving the party, Romeo hides in the
orchard while Mercutio and Benvolio call
for him to come out of hiding and go
home with them; yet he will not. After
they leave, Romeo appears and speaks to
Juliet under her window, saying "But
soft! What light through yonder window
breaks? It is the East, and Juliet is
the sun!" By and by they swear their
love to one another. Juliet tells Romeo
she'll send a messenger to him the next
day to learn the details of their
wedding. Having stayed up all night,
Romeo visits Friar Lawrence's cell and
tells him of this new love for Juliet.
Although Lawrence is critical at first,
Romeo eventually convinces him to marry
them. In the street, Benvolio tells
Mercutio that Romeo did not come home
that night, and that Tybalt has sent the
Montagues a letter challenging Romeo to
a duel. Romeo appears and they tease him
for hiding from them. Juliet's nurse and
servant Peter appear and Romeo tells her
to tell Juliet to go to the Friar's cell
that afternoon to be married. The Nurse
returns to Juliet and, though she skirts
around the message, she finally tells
Juliet the wonderful news. Soon, at the
Friar's cell, he marries Romeo and
Juliet, and Romeo plans to visit
Juliet's bedroom that evening.

At the
street, Benvolio and Mercutio encounter
Tybalt and Petruchio, leading to Tybalt
and Mercutio fighting since Tybalt tries
to pick a fight with Romeo, but he
refuses. Romeo tries to break up the
fight, but Tybalt slays Mercutio under
Romeo's arm, then Tybalt flees. As
Mercutio dies, he declares "A plague on
both your houses," since he is only a
friend of Romeo's and not his kinsmen.
When Benvolio informs Romeo that
Mercutio is dead, Romeo seeks out,
fights, and slays Tybalt in revenge.
Benvolio convinces Romeo to flee. The
prince appears and Benvolio explains all
to him, at which the Prince exiles Romeo
for slaying Tybalt. At the Capulet's
orchard, Juliet waits for Romeo when her
Nurse appears and informs her of
Mercutio and Tybalt's deaths, and
Romeo's banishment. Juliet falls into
despair, realizing she would rather
Tybalt dead than Romeo, but also that a
banished Romeo is virtually dead. At the
Friar's cell, he informs Romeo of the
Prince's edict of banishment, putting
him into despair. Romeo states he would
rather be dead than banished. The Nurse
arrives and tells Romeo that Juliet is
sad too, but forgives Romeo. Still,
Romeo pulls a dagger and tries to kill
himself, but the Friar stops him and
tells him to stay the night with Juliet,
then flee to Mantua. At Capulet's house,
he and Paris set the wedding date for
Paris and Juliet to be three days hence.
In Juliet's bedroom, Romeo says a
tearful goodbye to Juliet. After he
leaves, Lady Capulet appears and, while
discussing Tybalt's death, states she
will send a henchman to mantua to kill
Romeo (though she never does). She then
informs Juliet of her impending marriage
to Paris. Juliet tells her parents she
will not marry, but Lord Capulet
commands it will be so. The Nurse, too,
tells Juliet she should marry Paris. In
private, Juliet decides to no longer
trust the nurse and vows to kill herself
if the Friar cannot find a way to save
her from marrying Paris.

At Friar
Lawrence's cell, Paris informs the Friar
of his upcoming wedding to Juliet. When
Juliet arrives to see the Friar, Paris
politely leaves. The Friar, hearing
Juliet threaten suicide, tells her of a
"distilled liquor" she can take to fake
death. He explains the drug will keep
her asleep and seemingly dead for 42
hours, during which she can be placed in
the Capulet tomb. Then, when she wakes,
Romeo can be there waiting for her to
take her to Mantua. Friar Lawrence send
Friar John to Mantua with an explanatory
letter for Romeo. Juliet returns to her
father and apologizes for refusing to
marry, causing her dad to move the
wedding up to the next morning (two days
early). In her bedroom, Juliet sends her
mother and nurse away, then, after much
worrying over the future, she drinks the
vial of medicine and sleeps. Later in
the early morning, all feverishly
prepare for the wedding and Capulet
sends the Nurse to wake Juliet. The
Nurse wails upon finding Juliet "dead",
summoning the others to find her and
mourn. The Friar instructs all to
prepare Juliet for her funeral.

In Mantua,
Romeo's servant Balthasar arrives and
tells Romeo that Juliet is dead. Romeo
vows to see Juliet in her tomb and
poison himself there, buying the poison
from a poor Apothecary who illegally
sells it to Romeo only because he (the
Apothecary) needs the money. At
Lawrence's cell, Friar John reports he
could not deliver the letter to Romeo
since he (John) got stuck in a
quarantined house while searching for
Romeo. Friar Lawrence heads to the
cemetery with a crowbar. At the tomb,
Paris and his page arrive and Paris
mourns Juliet's death. Paris hides when
he hears Romeo and Balthasar approach.
Romeo orders Balthasar to leave him
alone, no matter what he hears. When
Romeo opens the tomb, Paris steps out
and tries to stop him by provoking him
to fight. Romeo entreats Paris to simply
walk away and not fight, but Paris
forces Romeo to fight him, resulting in
Romeo slaying Paris. In sorrow, Romeo
lays Paris in the tomb, while Paris'
page secretly leaves to call the watch.
Romeo finds Juliet and mourns her death,
then drinks his poison and dies. Outside
the tomb, Friar Lawrence arrives and
meets Balthasar who tells the Friar that
Romeo has been in the tomb for one half
hour. Lawrence enters the tomb and finds
Romeo and Paris dead. Juliet then awakes
and spots Romeo. The Friar, upon hearing
noises outside flees, leaving Juliet
with Romeo. Juliet tries to kill herself
with Romeo's poison, but can find none,
either in the vial or on Romeo's lips.
In desperation, she stabs herself with
Romeo's dagger. The watch arrives,
having found Balthasar and the Friar.
The Prince and Lord and Lady Capulet
arrive and learn Paris, Romeo, and
Juliet are dead (amazingly to them,
Juliet seems to have been alive, and
then newly dead again). Lord Montague
arrives and reports that his wife has
died from grief over Romeo's exile, then
learns himself of Romeo's death. Capulet
and Montague make peace and swear to
never fight again. They vow to build
solid gold statues of Romeo and Juliet
and place them side by side so all can
remember their plight.

information provided by
AndreRieuFans.com
Shirley Kirk
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