The marriages are often announced, but the marriage ceremony is rarely depicted, as it would be blasphemous to depict a sacrament onstage.
If we define an epilogue as a speech, at the close of the play, directed to the audience and inviting their applause, the following plays have an epilogue:
Pericles (spoken by Gower): "In Antiochus and his daughter you have heard . . . so on your patience evermore attending, New joy on you! Here our play has ending."
Henry VIII: "Tis ten to one this play can never please all that are here . . ."
Henry V (spoken by the Chorus): "Thus far, with rough and all-unable pen . . . that they lost France and made his England bleed, which oft our stage hath shown; and for their sake, in your fair minds let this acceptance take."
Henry IV Part II (spoken by a Dancer): " . . . One word more, I beseech you. If you be not too much cloyed with fat meat, our humble author will continue the story, with Sir John in it, and make you merry with fair Katharine of France . . ." This remarkable prose Epilogue is an early example of "Coming Attractions", advertising the sequel in the preceding play.
The Tempest (spoken by Prospero): "Now my charms are all o'erthrown . . . as you from crimes would pardon'd be, let your indulgence set me free." This, and not the more familiar "Our revels now have ended . . ." is the true epilogue of this play.
A Midsummer Night's Dream (spoken by Puck): "If we shadows have offended . . ."
As You Like It (spoken by Rosalind): "It is not the fashion to see the lady the epilogue, but it is no more unhandsome than to see the lord the prologue. . . ." One of Shakespeare's finest epilogues, in prose.
All's Well that Ends Well (spoken by the King): "The king's a beggar now the play is done . . ."
These eight examples are clearly epilogues. But it is not as clear as that in every case. First of all, it was not uncommon to have a dance or short comedy routine (called a jig) at the end of a play. In Midsummer Night's Dream, Bottom asks the Duke, at the end of Pyramus and Thisbe, "Will it please you to see the epilogue, or to hear a Bergomask dance between two of our company?". Such dances or jigs were light entertainment (witness Hamlet's sneering "he's for a jig or a tale of bawdry") and did not usually require a script.
But some of Shakespeare's plays end in specific songs, as Twelfth Night does, which suggests that Shakespeare wanted this song to be sung in the jig. The end of Troilus and Cressida is even more jig-like. Pandarus the father of whoremasters is left alone on the stage and delivers a speech addressed to "Good traders in the flesh", the men and women in the prostitution industry which flourished in the liberty of the Clink where the Globe Theatre was situated, concluding with a song about having syphilis. Is this an epilogue? In some sense, yes. The same can be said for Don Armado's Spring and Winter songs in Love's Labour's Lost and his final
line of dismissal, presumably to the audience: "You, that way. We, this way."
Other plays end with valedictory lines of this kind, such as the Prince's line at the end of Romeo and Juliet "For never was a story of more woe, than this of Juliet and her Romeo." Or the Bastard's patriotic speech at the end of King John, ostensibly to the young prince Henry (soon to be Henry III), but perhaps also to the audience, ending with "Nought shall make us rue, If England to itself do rest but true." Or Edgar's speech at the end of King Lear, ending with "We that are young, shall never see so much, or live so long." But we cannot really call these epilogues, since they are at least ostensibly spoken to someone onstage, and the fourth wall is not broken.
You will note that there are no epilogues for any of the tragedies.
resolution
at the end.
In Renaissance performances of Shakespeare plays, many of them would end in a dance. This is not necessarily notated in the text.
Shakespearean comedies generally include love triangles and character disguises. Shakespearean tragedies always end in an unavoidable death. Shakespearean histories are typically about the monarchs in England.
Things start out going well for the main characters, then they start going wrong, and they get worse, and at the end a whole bunch of people die.
Epilogue
resolution
Epilogue
Epilogue
Epilogue
Epilogue is the correct spelling. (A short speech performed to an audience at the end of a play; an afterword at the end of a novel)
All Shakespearean plays, including Macbeth, are divided into five acts. This has to do less with the way Shakespeare wrote them and more to do with how long a candle would burn before needing to be replaced. Indoor performances were by candlelight and thus had breaks at the end of the acts.
Mockingjay has 27 chapters. It is divided into three parts, and has an epilogue at the end of the book.
denoument, or the end of a story
An afterword is a comment from the author or an epilogue at the end of a book. It is a concluding section and can be written by someone other than the author.
Nothing, except that they are characters in Shakespearean tragedies, both young European men. And they both end up dead in their respective plays.
Yes