Events that forshadow Romeo and Juliet's inevitable death.?
Other than prologue.
Events that forshadow Romeo and Juliet's inevitable death.?city operawhen i think it was Tybalt that says 'a plague on both your houses'. Meaning that either family will suffer misfortune.
Events that forshadow Romeo and Juliet's inevitable death.?performing shows opera theater
About mid-way through, there's a death's head hanging over Romeo and Juliet as they are sipping tea while watching the news. Then later, there's a pirate's flag on their ship to the Orient to discover lost treasure. It seems a bit out of place but that's how The Big Shake as we call him wrote it... (Just read the book already... Ha, ha.)|||This is a good example.
1.5 91-92.
"If he be married.
My grave is like to be my wedding bed."
She means that if Romeo is married, she will die unmarried, because she will never marry another, but she is also unknowingly foreshadowing her fate, in which her grave does become her wedding bed.
That's the best example, I think.|||- romeo slays Tybalt: bad suffers eventually (romeo will die)
- as you said, the prologue
- the whole idea of the houses hating each other: obviously, the two can't be with each other. so death is usually the solution
-marriage to paris: true love always stay together..so obviously, the two will escape.
there's more...but i can't be bothered to list them
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