They are just very important because of the hierarchy of Shakespeare's beliefs and his thoughts on the world around himself.
You didn't read it before writing that answer, did you?
Here are the lines: "From forth the fatal loins of these two foes a pair of star-crossed lovers take their life." They are important because they contain the most famous phrase in the whole prologue, the words that identify Romeo and Juliet, the children of the feuding families, as the "star-crossed lovers" who will be at the centre of the plot in this play.
No, it is in strict Iambic Pentametor.
All of the prologue, taken as a whole, is a sonnet. A sonnet is a fourteen-line poem with a certain structure. The Prologue is fourteen lines long and has that structure.
A prologue, or prolog, is an opening to a story that establishes the setting and gives background details, often some earlier story that ties into the main one, and other miscellaneous information. Prologue is not a poem.
Especially, the lines "do with their death bury their parents' strife" foreshadows not only the deaths of Romeo and Juliet but also the families' reconciliation. In case you weren't listening the first time, he says it again with the lines "their parents rage, which but their children's end naught could remove."
In the play Romeo and Juliet, Romeo has 300064 lines.
No, it is in strict Iambic Pentametor.
All of the prologue, taken as a whole, is a sonnet. A sonnet is a fourteen-line poem with a certain structure. The Prologue is fourteen lines long and has that structure.
The first four lines of the prologue rhyme the words "dignity", "scene", "mutiny" and "unclean".
A prologue, or prolog, is an opening to a story that establishes the setting and gives background details, often some earlier story that ties into the main one, and other miscellaneous information. Prologue is not a poem.
In Act V, Scene 3, Juliet's lines echo the sentiment from the prologue by emphasizing fate and the idea that Romeo and Juliet's tragic love was predetermined. She refers to their love as "death-marked" and states that they were "star-crossed lovers," reinforcing the theme of destiny and the inevitability of their tragic end.
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Especially, the lines "do with their death bury their parents' strife" foreshadows not only the deaths of Romeo and Juliet but also the families' reconciliation. In case you weren't listening the first time, he says it again with the lines "their parents rage, which but their children's end naught could remove."
The character with the least lines in Romeo and Juliet is Peter. He is a minor character who serves as a servant to the Nurse.
An example of imagery in Romeo and Juliet is seen in Romeo's description of Juliet as the sun in Act 2, Scene 2 when he says "But, soft! What light through yonder window breaks? It is the east, and Juliet is the sun." This imagery creates a sense of brightness and warmth associated with Juliet, emphasizing her beauty and importance to Romeo.
In the play Romeo and Juliet, Romeo has 300064 lines.
Of course an easy way of determining this would be to read it - it is available free of charge at the library or under books.google.com Having said that: Shakespeare wrote in iambic (2) pentameter (5) which means that virtually all of the lines in his plays, unless he wanted the scene to be odd or other worldly, have 10 (ten) syllables. This is also true of the prologue of Romeo and Juliet.
According to my edition of the play, Juliet does not say lines 137-138. Clearly your edition must have different line numbers. Juliet's lines which surround it, and especially those which follow, deal with the themes of love and death, and love and family strife found in the Prologue. But they do not really echo it in the sense of using similar or the same phrases.