"Two households . . . break to new mutiny". It's not the households but the people who live there who do the breaking--the households are treated as people.
"Whose misadventured piteous o'erthrows . . . bury their parents' strife." It's tough to tell, but the noun in this sentence is I believe "o'erthrows", meaning reversals of fortune, which of course cannot perform the act of burying anything.
The deaths of Romeo and Juliet
Star cross'd lovers and death mark'd love are examples of metaphors? No they are not. "Bury their parents' strife" maybe. There are no similes in the prologue.
The deaths of Romeo and Juliet.
(Prolouge line #. )
The narrator
The deaths of Romeo and Juliet
Star cross'd lovers and death mark'd love are examples of metaphors? No they are not. "Bury their parents' strife" maybe. There are no similes in the prologue.
The major plot element spoiled in the prologue of Romeo and Juliet is the tragic ending of the play, where the two young lovers, Romeo and Juliet, ultimately die.
Romeo and Juliet
The deaths of Romeo and Juliet.
(Prolouge line #. )
The narrator
The line from the prologue of Romeo and Juliet that foreshadows the tragic ending of the play is "A pair of star-crossed lovers take their life."
Death and Love. Usually one does not associate love with death
framework
The Prologue, then Sampson, then Gregory.
As dictated in the prologue "Is now the two hours' traffic of our stage". Romeo and Juliet ran for two hours.