Get married.
Before parting, Romeo and Juliet decide to get married in secret. They plan to elope and be together despite the feud between their families.
After Romeo and Juliet died, the Capulets and the Montagues decide to make peace and remember Romeo and Juliet together as the two good lovers.
The chourus describes Romeo and Juliet as star crossed lovers.
A poem about lovers parting at dawn :) -Apex-
No. There is no comparison between two different things. Parting makes Juliet sad, yet there is great pleasure in talking to Romeo, even saying goodbye to him, which makes it a "sweet sorrow". That's just a plain (if oxymoronic) description of her feelings when parting.
They died.
Romeo and Juliet are "a pair of star-crossed lovers . . . who, with their deaths, bury their parents' strife." We are told that before the play even starts.
"Love is a smoke raised with a fume of sighs; Being purged, a fire sparkling in lovers' eyes; Being vexed, a sea nourished with lovers' tears. What is it else? A madness most discreet, A choking gall and a preserving sweet."
Probably when Juliet's father orders her to marry Paris.
"Star-crossed lovers" refers to individuals whose love is hindered by external forces beyond their control, often resulting in a tragic outcome. The term originated from William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," where the young lovers Romeo and Juliet are from feuding families and their love ultimately leads to their untimely deaths.
Shakespeare means Star-crossed lovers by saying that they are doomed to die by the stars?
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It can be translated as 'doomed lovers,' in that their fate was already written amongst the stars.