The final segment of the play, as is Shakespeare’s habit, breaks down into several shorter, varying scenes, all designed to hold the audience’s attention (not that it is a large task since the play is moving to its ultimate climax–however, after nearly two to three hours audiences can become restless). First, there is Romeo’s final, “death” soliloquy, always a moment that actors relish. He does demonstrate an admirable side to his character in expressing some regret at Paris’s death and by laying him in a tomb, a final decent action. He is also surrounded by other bodies–the dead Tybalt “in thy bloody sheet,” and of course Juliet’s body which, ironically he describes: “Beauty’s ensign yet / Is crimson in thy lips and in thy cheeks, / And death’s pale flag is not advancèd there.” It’s ironic, of course, because Juliet isn’t really dead, hence the colour of her face, etc. There is perhaps just a touch of excess in Romeo’s final lines (“Eyes, look, …. etc”), the repetition seeming slightly self-indulgent. His actual death line is suitably romantic (“Thus with a kiss I die”), though even that does contain a bawdy innuendo, or at least it would in other circumstances.
And then, too late, the Friar arrives, and Juliet revives, too late. Conveniently a noise arouses the Friar’s cowardly nature, conveniently leaving Juliet to discover the dead Romeo and commit suicide as well. Plot necessity indeed. However, Juliet’s death “scene” contrasts quite markedly with Romeo’s. His soliloquy is lengthy, and perhaps overly poetic at times, Juliet’s is short and to the point (literally, as it happens). Moreover, after discovering that the poison is insufficient, she then actually kills herself by stabbing herself–not a particularly easy method of suicide (thus revealing her determination, etc). Freudians might be inclined to give a psychological interpretation to Juliet stabbing herself, especially as her final words are “and let me die.” (Those familiar with the Zeffirelli movie version might note how conveniently Juliet manages to fall across Romeo.)
All that remains is the final wrap-up, although it actually proves to be quite lengthy, particularly the Friar’s curiously long explanation of events (229-69) which the on-stage characters might need, but certainly not the audience. Noteworthy is Prince Escalus’s arrival, his third entrance on stage. As previously, his function is to restore order and to point out the root cause of the disorder:
“Capulet, Montague,
See what a scourge is laid upon your hate,
That heaven finds means to kill your joys with love.
And I, for winking at your discords too,
Have lost a brace of kinsmen. All are punished.”
Escalus also gets the final lines in the form of a couplet (a common way of marking the end of a scene or play). This couplet possesses a simplicity that can be quite effective, though the more cynical might deem it trite:
“For never was a story of more woe
Than this of Juliet and her Romeo.”
It goes without saying that the play remains the most famous of all adolescent tragic love stories.
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