Romeo and Juliet
Opening Prologue: The play opens with a prologue spoken by a Chorus in the form of a fourteen-line sonnet. In this concise manner, we are told from the start that the play's setting is the Italian city of Verona, that a blood feud between two families (Montagues and Capulets) is the context in which the star-cross'd lovers (Romeo and Juliet) will fall in love, and that only with their deaths will this conflict come to an end.
Act I Scene i: In a public place of Verona, we first see two servants of the Capulet family armed with swords, ready to fight with any "dog of the house of Montague." They express the enmity toward Montague in vulgar terms tinged with sexual innuendoes. Just then, two servants of the Montague household enter and the two sides begin to fight. The fight ends temporarily when Benvolio, a Montague and a cousin to Romeo, appears and beats down their swords. Immediately after this, however, a noble member of the Capulet family, Tybalt, bursts in, and begins to fight with Benvolio. The fracas attracts others, including Old Capulet and his wife, Old Montague and his wife, and the Prince of Verona, named Escalus. The Prince commands these rebellious subjects to stop breaking the civil peace, complaining that these street battles have erupted on several occasions, and threatening lives of the combatants. Old Montague asks Benvolio about the cause of the argument at hand, but Lady Montague's concern is with their son, Romeo. She is glad that Romeo was not involved in the fight, but she then says that her son has been in a melancholy and depressed state of mind. Romeo enters, appearing down-cast and distracted, but he nevertheless speaks in highly affected, figurative language about the brawl, using oxymorons like "loving hate," "heavy lightness," and "serious vanity." Romeo explains to Benvolio that he is madly in love with a woman named Rosaline (who never appears as a character in the play) who is sworn to chastity. Benvolio s