The prince ordered the families to end their feud.
They are concerned about their familes names because their familes feud with each other.
The Montagues (Romeo's family) and the Capulets (Juliets family)
The large "feud" of Romeo and Juliet is each of the families. The Montagues and Capulets never get along and are always fighting. Romeo and Juliet want to get married but they have to have a secretive marriage because it is so outrageous for a Montague to marry a Capulet.
Yes, both families needed the grief of losing a child to realise that the feud was unnecessary. -Anonomous.
Their options are to take sides or get out of the way.
By killing their children (Romeo and Juliet)
It depends on what you mean by real. There really were two families called Montecchi and Capuletti who were opposed to one another because of being on opposite sides of the Italian conflict between the Guelfs and the Ghibbelines. However, only one of the families lived in Verona, and the story of Romeo and Juliet did not actually happen to them. So although they were real families and they did feud, their feud was not the "Romeo and Juliet family feud". Since the Romeo and Juliet story is a fiction, the feud is only real within the context of the story. In that sense, and in that sense only, the feud is as real as Romeo and Juliet's love.
They are concerned about their familes names because their familes feud with each other.
The Montagues (Romeo's family) and the Capulets (Juliets family)
The large "feud" of Romeo and Juliet is each of the families. The Montagues and Capulets never get along and are always fighting. Romeo and Juliet want to get married but they have to have a secretive marriage because it is so outrageous for a Montague to marry a Capulet.
Romeo kills himself because he thinks Juliet is dead. Juliet then wakes up to find Romeo dead so she then kills herself. When their families find them they decide to end their feud with eachother.
The feud in "Romeo and Juliet" is between the Capulet and Montague families in Verona. The reason for the feud is never explicitly stated in the play, but it is implied to be a long-standing rivalry based on pride and past disagreements. The feud serves as a major obstacle to Romeo and Juliet's love and ultimately leads to tragedy.
The grief both the families have after the deaths of Romeo and Juliet.
The Montague and Capulet families have an ancient grudge in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." This feud is the central conflict that drives the tragic events of the story.
Prince Escalus of Verona says this to the feuding Capulet and Montague families, expressing his frustration at the ongoing feud that has resulted in needless violence and death in the play "Romeo and Juliet." He also blames the families for the tragic outcome and insists that they reconcile after the deaths of Romeo and Juliet.
The families forgive and forget, ending their lasting feud
she prmises to get romeo for Juliet