Written by Shakespeare
at a relatively early juncture in his literary career Romeo and Juliet.
Performed from around 1594-95 and first published in a "bad"
quarto in 1597. The characters of Romeo and Juliet have been depicted
in literature, music, dance, and theatre. The appeal of the young hero
and heroine--whose families, the Montagues and Capulets, respectively,
are implacable enemies--is such that they have become, in the popular
imagination, the representative type of star-crossed lovers. Shakespeare's principal source for the plot
was The Tragicall Historye of Romeus and Juliet (1562), a long narrative
poem by the English poet Arthur Broke (d. 1563). Broke had based his poem
on a French translation of a tale by the Italian Matteo Bandello (1485-1561).
During much of the twentieth century, critics
tended to disparage this play in comparison to the four great tragedies
that Shakespeare wrote in the first decade of the seventeenth century
(Hamlet, King Lear, Macbeth, and Othello). Appraised next to the Bard's
mature works, Romeo and Juliet appears to lack the psychological depth
and the structural complexity of Shakespeare's later tragedies. But over
the past three decades or so, many scholars have altered this assessment,
effectively upgrading its status within Shakespeare's canon. They have
done this by discarding comparative evaluation and judging Romeo and Juliet
as a work of art in its own right.
Shakespeare's tragic drama of the "star-crossed"
young lovers is an extraordinary work. Indeed, Romeo and Juliet was an
experimental stage piece at the time of its composition, featuring several
radical departures from long-standing conventions. These innovative aspects
of the play, moreover, reinforce and embellish its principal themes. The
latter include the antithesis between love and hate, the correlative use
of a light/dark polarity, the handling of time (as both theme and as structural
element), and the prominent status accorded to Fortune and its expression
in the dreams, omens and forebodings that presage its tragic conclusion.
In the streets of Verona, another brawl breaks
out between the servants of the feuding noble families of Capulet and
Montague. Benvolio, a Montague, tries to stop the fighting, but is himself
embroiled when the rash Capulet, Tybalt, arrives on the scene. After citizens
outraged by the constant violence beat back the warring factions, Prince
Escalus, the ruler of Verona, attempts to prevent any further conflicts
between the families by decreeing death for any individual who disturbs
the peace in the future.
Romeo, the son of Montague, runs into his cousin Benvolio, who had earlier
seen Romeo moping in a grove of sycamores. After some prodding by Benvolio,
Romeo confides that he is in love with Rosaline, a woman who does not
return his affections. Benvolio counsels him to forget this woman and
find another, more beautiful one, but Romeo remains despondent.
Meanwhile, Paris, a kinsman of the prince,
seeks Juliet's hand in marriage. Her father Capulet, though happy at the
match, asks Paris to wait two years, since Juliet is not yet even fourteen.
Capulet dispatches a servant with a list of people to invite to a masquerade
and feast he traditionally holds. He invites Paris to the feast, hoping
that Paris will begin to win Juliet's heart.
Romeo and Benvolio, still discussing Rosaline,
encounter the Capulet servant bearing the list of invitations. Benvolio
suggests that they attend, since that will allow Romeo to compare his
beloved to other beautiful women of Verona. Romeo agrees to go with Benvolio
to the feast, but only because Rosaline, whose name he reads on the list,
will be there.
In Capulet's household, young Juliet talks
with her mother, Lady Capulet, and her Nurse about the possibility of
marrying Paris. Juliet has not yet considered marriage, but agrees to
look at Paris during the feast to see if she thinks she could fall in
love with him.
The feast begins. A melancholy Romeo follows
Benvolio and their witty friend Mercutio to Capulet's house. Once inside,
Romeo sees Juliet from a distance and instantly falls in love with her;
he forgets about Rosaline completely. As Romeo watches Juliet, entranced,
a young Capulet, Tybalt, recognizes him, and is enraged that a Montague
would sneak into a Capulet feast. He prepares to attack, but Capulet holds
him back. Soon, Romeo speaks to Juliet, and the two experience a profound
attraction. They kiss, not even knowing each other's names. When he finds
out from Juliet's nurse that she is the daughter of Capulet-his family's
enemy-he becomes distraught. When Juliet learns that the young man she
has just kissed is the son of Montague, she grows equally upset.
As Mercutio and Benvolio leave the Capulet
estate, Romeo leaps over the orchard wall into the garden, unable to leave
Juliet behind. From his hiding place, he sees Juliet in a window above
the orchard, and hears her speak his name. He calls out to her, and they
exchange vows of love.
Romeo hurries to see his friend and confessor Friar Laurence, who, though
shocked at the sudden turn of Romeo's heart, agrees to marry the young
lovers in secret since he sees in their love the possibility of ending
the age-old feud between Capulet and Montague. The following day, Romeo
and Juliet meet at Friar Laurence's cell and are married. The Nurse, who
is privy to the secret, procures a ladder, which Romeo will use to climb
into Juliet's window for their wedding night.
The next day, Benvolio and Mercutio encounter
Tybalt-Juliet's cousin-who, still enraged that Romeo attended Capulet's
feast, has challenged Romeo to a duel. Romeo appears. Now Tybalt's kinsman
by marriage, Romeo begs the Capulet to hold off the duel until he understands
why Romeo does not want to fight. Disgusted with this plea for peace,
Mercutio says that he will fight Tybalt himself. The two begin to duel.
Romeo tries to stop them by leaping between the combatants. Tybalt stabs
Mercutio under Romeo's arm, and Mercutio dies. Romeo, in a rage, kills
Tybalt. Romeo flees from the scene. Soon after, the Prince declares him
forever banished from Verona for his crime. Friar Laurence arranges for
Romeo to spend his wedding night with Juliet before he has to leave for
Mantua the following morning.
In her room, Juliet awaits the arrival of
her new husband. The Nurse enters, and, after some confusion, tells Juliet
that Romeo has killed Tybalt. Distraught, Juliet suddenly finds herself
married to a man who has killed her kinsman. But she resettles herself,
and realizes that her duty belongs with her love: to Romeo.
Romeo sneaks into Juliet's room that night,
and at last they consummate their marriage and their love. Morning comes,
and the lovers bid farewell, unsure when they will see each other again.
Juliet learns that her father, affected by the recent events, now intends
for her to marry Paris in just three days. Unsure of how to proceed-unable
to reveal to her parents that she is married to Romeo, but unwilling to
marry Paris now that she is Romeo's wife-Juliet asks her Nurse for advice.
She counsels Juliet to proceed as if Romeo were dead and to marry Paris,
who is a better match anyway. Disgusted with the Nurse's disloyalty, Juliet
disregards her advice and hurries to Friar Laurence. He concocts a plan
to reunite Juliet with Romeo in Mantua: the night before her wedding to
Paris, Juliet must drink a potion that will make her appear to be dead;
after she is laid to rest in the family's crypt, the Friar and Romeo will
secretly retrieve her, and she will be free to live with Romeo, away from
their parents' feuding.
Juliet returns home to discover the wedding
has been moved ahead one day; she is to be married tomorrow. That night,
Juliet drinks the potion, and the Nurse discovers her, apparently dead,
the next morning. The Capulets grieve, and Juliet is entombed according
to plan. But Friar Laurence's message explaining the plan to Romeo never
reaches Mantua. Its bearer, Friar John, gets confined to a quarantined
house. Romeo hears only that Juliet is dead.
Romeo learns only of Juliet's death and decides
to kill himself rather than live without her. He buys a vial of poison
from a reluctant Apothecary, then speeds back to Verona to take his own
life at Juliet's tomb. Outside the Capulet crypt, Romeo comes upon Paris,
who is scattering flowers on Juliet's grave. They fight; Romeo kills Paris.
He enters the tomb, sees Juliet's inanimate body, drinks the poison, and
dies by her side. Just then, Friar Laurence enters, and realizes that
Romeo has killed Paris and himself. At the same time, Juliet awakes. Friar
Laurence hears the coming of the watch. When Juliet refuses to leave with
him, he flees alone. Juliet sees her beloved Romeo, and intuits that he
has killed himself with poison. She kisses his poisoned lips, and when
that does not kill her, buries his dagger in her chest, falling dead upon
his body.
The watch arrives, followed closely by the
Prince, the Capulets, and Montague. Montague declares that Lady Montague
has died of grief over Romeo's exile. Seeing their children's bodies,
Capulet and Montague agree to end their long-standing feud, and to raise
gold statues of their children side-by-side in a newly peaceful "newly
peaceful"? Verona.
The most complex of Shakespeare's early plays,
Romeo and Juliet is far more than "a play of young love" or
"the world's typical love-tragedy." Weaving together a large
number of related impressions and judgments, it is as much about hate
as love. It tells of a family and its home as well as a feud and a tragic
marriage. The public life of Verona and the private lives of the Veronese
make up the setting for the love of Juliet and Romeo and provide the background
against which their love can be assessed. It is not the deaths of the
lovers that conclude the play but the public revelation of what has happened,
with the admonitions of the Prince and the reconciliation of the two families.
Shakespeare enriched an already old story
by surrounding the guileless mutual passion of Romeo and Juliet with the
mature bawdry of the other characters--the Capulet servants Sampson and
Gregory open the play with their fantasies of exploits with the Montague
women; the tongues of the Nurse and Mercutio are seldom free from sexual
matters--but the innocence of the lovers is unimpaired.
Romeo and Juliet made a strong impression
on contemporary audiences. It was also one of Shakespeare's first plays
to be pirated; a very bad text appeared in 1597. Detestable though it
is, this version does derive from a performance of the play, and a good
deal of what was seen on stage was recorded. Two years later another version
of the play appeared, issued by a different, more respectable publisher,
and this is essentially the play known today, for the printer was working
from a manuscript fairly close to Shakespeare's own. Yet in neither edition
did Shakespeare's name appear on the title page, and it was only with
the publication of Love's Labour's Lost in 1598 that publishers had come
to feel that the name of Shakespeare as a dramatist, as well as the public
esteem of the company of actors to which he belonged, could make an impression
on potential purchasers of playbooks.