Montague promises to build a golden statue of Juliet
''If ever you disturb our streets again Your lives shall pay the forfeit of the peace'' basically, if the feud between the Montagues and Capulets disturbs the streets of Verona again, the participants will be executed.
This is a line from Act I Scene 1 of Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare. The line is spoken by Escalus, the Prince of Verona. He is addressing Montague and Capulet whose servants have started a brawl in the marketplace.
He's banished from Verona.
Banishment
I am shearching for thomas N Montague dayle of danbury conn. for 43 years he was a good freand. Roseline
Montague promises to build a gold statue of Juliet as a symbol of peace and reconciliation between their two feuding families in Verona.
No
Lord Montague lives in the fictional city of Verona in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." The Montague family resides in a grand estate in Verona, as depicted in the play.
Escalus banishes Montague from Verona for instigating violence and disrupting the peace in the city.
Neither; he was from Mantua and had nothing to do with Verona politics.
No. He is the Prince of Verona and the voice of reason between the Capulet and Montague families, but he is not a member of either family.
Romeo is a fictional character from William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." He is a young man from the wealthy Montague family in the city of Verona, Italy.
He lived in the Montague mansion in Verona, Italy.
His wife.
Friar Lawrence is neither a Montague nor a Capulet. He is a member of the clergy in Verona who plays a significant role in the lives of Romeo and Juliet.
The citizens of Verona are planning to build a gold statue of Juliet as a tribute to her tragic love story with Romeo. The sculpture will serve as a symbol of enduring love and attract tourists to the city.
Montague announces that Lady Montague has died because of Romeo's exile from Verona. He explains that the news of Romeo's banishment caused such grief to her that it led to her untimely death.