Romeo and Juliet Group

Topic: "For never was a story of more woe than this of Juliet and her Romeo"

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1

smallxlady216

Who said this, to who, and what does it mean?

2

The Prince of Verona speaks this line at the very end of the play--Act 5, scene iii lines 309-310.  It basically means that had these two families mended their differences, then Romeo and Juliet would not have felt the urge to love secretly and to go to such lengths to find happiness.  They could have married and done much good to be the "glue" between the two feuding families and the peace that the Prince had wished for and threatened both the Capulets and Montagues with banishment in the hopes of having for his city.

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