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Star-Crossed - 2014 Our Toil Shall Strive to Mend 1-3 is rated/received certificates of: USA:TV-14
"What here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend." is the 14th line of the prologue. Read it out loud. "What hereshall miss, our toil shall strive to mend." It's iambic pentameter, the even-numbered syllables are stressed. If you still can't hear it, get hold of a recording of someone saying this prologue and you will hear the rhythm.
Any shortcomings or errors that we overlook or ignore will likely become more difficult to fix in the future. It is important to address and correct issues promptly to prevent them from escalating and causing more problems down the line.
"The which if you with patient ears attend, What here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend." In other words, if you want to hear more, be patient, because we will act it out for you.
It's not "end", it's "mend". Having briefly summarized the plot of the play in the first 12 lines of the sonnet, the Prologue now assures the audience that, in return for their attention, the actors will work hard ("toil") over the next two hours to try hard ("strive") to fill in all the details of the story missing from the summary. It could also mean that the actors will use all their professional skills to make up for any shortcomings in the author's script ("miss", in this case, in the sense of "fail to hit the mark") -- a joke, of course.
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mend it
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It means if you still have the will to live then you will learn over time to mend yourself by learning from what you have done.
If you mean "Can a fish heal a cut?", the answer is yes.
"Toil" means "work", in Shakespeare or the work of any other English writer. Shakespeare uses the word "toil" three times in the play. In the prologue he says, "What here shall miss, our toil shall strive to mend" which means that if you don't get the drift of the story from the Prologue, the actors' work should make it clear. When Paris attempts to arrest Romeo he says, "Stop thy unhallow'd toil, vile Montague!", the unholy work he is referring to being Romeo's actions in opening Juliet's grave. Finally, the nurse, getting things ready for Romeo and Juliet's wedding night, says to Juliet, "I am the drudge and toil in your delight, But you shall bear the burden soon at night", meaning that the nurse is working hard now, but Juliet will get some serious exercise later when "bearing the burden" of Romeo. Meaning of toil is hard working.
No, mend is a verb.