Once upon a time there lived in Verona
two great families named Montagu and Capulet.
They were both rich, and I suppose they were as sensible,
in most things, as other rich people. But in one
thing they were extremely silly. There was an
old, old quarrel between the two families, and instead
of making it up like reasonable folks, they made a
sort of pet of their quarrel, and would not let it
die out. So that a Montagu wouldn’t speak
to a Capulet if he met one in the street nor
a Capulet to a Montagu or if they did speak,
it was to say rude and unpleasant things, which often
ended in a fight. And their relations and servants
were just as foolish, so that street fights and duels
and uncomfortablenesses of that kind were always growing
out of the Montagu-and-Capulet quarrel.
Now Lord Capulet, the head of that
family, gave a party a grand supper and
a dance and he was so hospitable that he
said anyone might come to it except (of course) the
Montagues. But there was a young Montagu named
Romeo, who very much wanted to be there, because Rosaline,
the lady he loved, had been asked. This lady
had never been at all kind to him, and he had no reason
to love her; but the fact was that he wanted to love
somebody, and as he hadn’t seen the right lady,
he was obliged to love the wrong one. So to the
Capulet’s grand party he came, with his friends
Mercutio and Benvolio.
Old Capulet welcomed him and his two
friends very kindly and young Romeo moved
about among the crowd of courtly folk dressed in their
velvets and satins, the men with jeweled sword
hilts and collars, and the ladies with brilliant gems
on breast and arms, and stones of price set in their
bright girdles. Romeo was in his best too, and
though he wore a black mask over his eyes and nose,
everyone could see by his mouth and his hair, and
the way he held his head, that he was twelve times
handsomer than anyone else in the room.
Presently amid the dancers he saw
a lady so beautiful and so lovable that from that
moment he never again gave one thought to that Rosaline
whom he had thought he loved. And he looked at
this other fair lady, as she moved in the dance in
her white satin and pearls, and all the world seemed
vain and worthless to him compared with her. And
he was saying this, or something like it, when Tybalt,
Lady Capulet’s nephew, hearing his voice, knew
him to be Romeo. Tybalt, being very angry, went
at once to his uncle, and told him how a Montagu had
come uninvited to the feast; but old Capulet was too
fine a gentleman to be discourteous to any man under
his own roof, and he bade Tybalt be quiet. But
this young man only waited for a chance to quarrel
with Romeo.
In the meantime Romeo made his way
to the fair lady, and told her in sweet words that
he loved her, and kissed her. Just then her mother
sent for her, and then Romeo found out that the lady
on whom he had set his heart’s hopes was Juliet,
the daughter of Lord Capulet, his sworn foe.
So he went away, sorrowing indeed, but loving her none
the less.
Then Juliet said to her nurse:
“Who is that gentleman that would not dance?”
“His name is Romeo, and a Montagu,
the only son of your great enemy,” answered
the nurse.
Then Juliet went to her room, and
looked out of her window, over the beautiful green-grey
garden, where the moon was shining. And Romeo
was hidden in that garden among the trees because
he could not bear to go right away without trying
to see her again. So she not knowing
him to be there spoke her secret thought
aloud, and told the quiet garden how she loved Romeo.
And Romeo heard and was glad beyond
measure. Hidden below, he looked up and saw her
fair face in the moonlight, framed in the blossoming
creepers that grew round her window, and as he looked
and listened, he felt as though he had been carried
away in a dream, and set down by some magician in
that beautiful and enchanted garden.
“Ah why are you called
Romeo?” said Juliet. “Since I love
you, what does it matter what you are called?”
“Call me but love, and I’ll
be new baptized henceforth I never will
be Romeo,” he cried, stepping into the full
white moonlight from the shade of the cypresses and
oleanders that had hidden him.
She was frightened at first, but when
she saw that it was Romeo himself, and no stranger,
she too was glad, and, he standing in the garden below
and she leaning from the window, they spoke long together,
each one trying to find the sweetest words in the
world, to make that pleasant talk that lovers use.
And the tale of all they said, and the sweet music
their voices made together, is all set down in a golden
book, where you children may read it for yourselves
some day.
And the time passed so quickly, as
it does for folk who love each other and are together,
that when the time came to part, it seemed as though
they had met but that moment and indeed
they hardly knew how to part.
“I will send to you to-morrow,” said Juliet.
And so at last, with lingering and longing, they said
good-bye.
Juliet went into her room, and a dark curtain bid
her bright window.
Romeo went away through the still and dewy garden
like a man in a dream.
The next morning, very early, Romeo
went to Friar Laurence, a priest, and, telling him
all the story, begged him to marry him to Juliet without
delay. And this, after some talk, the priest consented
to do.
So when Juliet sent her old nurse
to Romeo that day to know what he purposed to do,
the old woman took back a a message that all was well,
and all things ready for the marriage of Juliet and
Romeo on the next morning.
The young lovers were afraid to ask
their parents’ consent to their marriage, as
young people should do, because of this foolish old
quarrel between the Capulets and the Montagues.
And Friar Laurence was willing to
help the young lovers secretly, because he thought
that when they were once married their parents might
soon be told, and that the match might put a happy
end to the old quarrel.
So the next morning early, Romeo and
Juliet were married at Friar Laurence’s cell,
and parted with tears and kisses. And Romeo promised
to come into the garden that evening, and the nurse
got ready a rope-ladder to let down from the window,
so that Romeo could climb up and talk to his dear
wife quietly and alone.
But that very day a dreadful thing happened.
Tybalt, the young man who had been
so vexed at Romeo’s going to the Capulet’s
feast, met him and his two friends, Mercutio and Benvolio,
in the street, called Romeo a villain, and asked him
to fight. Romeo had no wish to fight with Juliet’s
cousin, but Mercutio drew his sword, and he and Tybalt
fought. And Mercutio was killed. When Romeo
saw that this friend was dead, he forgot everything
except anger at the man who had killed him, and he
and Tybalt fought till Tybalt fell dead.
So, on the very day of his wedding,
Romeo killed his dear Juliet’s cousin, and was
sentenced to be banished. Poor Juliet and her
young husband met that night indeed; he climbed the
rope-ladder among the flowers, and found her window,
but their meeting was a sad one, and they parted with
bitter tears and hearts heavy, because they could not
know when they should meet again.
Now Juliet’s father, who, of
course, had no idea that she was married, wished her
to wed a gentleman named Paris, and was so angry when
she refused, that she hurried away to ask Friar Laurence
what she should do. He advised her to pretend
to consent, and then he said:
“I will give you a draught that
will make you seem to be dead for two days, and then
when they take you to church it will be to bury you,
and not to marry you. They will put you in the
vault thinking you are dead, and before you wake up
Romeo and I will be there to take care of you.
Will you do this, or are you afraid?”
“I will do it; talk not to me
of fear!” said Juliet. And she went home
and told her father she would marry Paris. If
she had spoken out and told her father the truth .
. . well, then this would have been a different story.
Lord Capulet was very much pleased
to get his own way, and set about inviting his friends
and getting the wedding feast ready. Everyone
stayed up all night, for there was a great deal to
do, and very little time to do it in. Lord Capulet
was anxious to get Juliet married because he saw she
was very unhappy. Of course she was really fretting
about her husband Romeo, but her father thought she
was grieving for the death of her cousin Tybalt, and
he thought marriage would give her something else
to think about.
Early in the morning the nurse came
to call Juliet, and to dress her for her wedding;
but she would not wake, and at last the nurse cried
out suddenly
“Alas! alas! help! help! my
lady’s dead! Oh, well-a-day that ever I
was born!”
Lady Capulet came running in, and
then Lord Capulet, and Lord Paris, the bridegroom.
There lay Juliet cold and white and lifeless, and all
their weeping could not wake her. So it was a
burying that day instead of a marrying. Meantime
Friar Laurence had sent a messenger to Mantua with
a letter to Romeo telling him of all these things;
and all would have been well, only the messenger was
delayed, and could not go.
But ill news travels fast. Romeo’s
servant who knew the secret of the marriage, but not
of Juliet’s pretended death, heard of her funeral,
and hurried to Mantua to tell Romeo how his young
wife was dead and lying in the grave.
“Is it so?” cried Romeo,
heart-broken. “Then I will lie by Juliet’s
side to-night.”
And he bought himself a poison, and
went straight back to Verona. He hastened to
the tomb where Juliet was lying. It was not a
grave, but a vault. He broke open the door, and
was just going down the stone steps that led to the
vault where all the dead Capulets lay, when he heard
a voice behind him calling on him to stop.
It was the Count Paris, who was to
have married Juliet that very day.
“How dare you come here and
disturb the dead bodies of the Capulets, you vile
Montagu?” cried Paris.
Poor Romeo, half mad with sorrow,
yet tried to answer gently.
“You were told,” said
Paris, “that if you returned to Verona you must
die.”
“I must indeed,” said
Romeo. “I came here for nothing else.
Good, gentle youth leave me! Oh, go before
I do you any harm! I love you better than myself go leave
me here ”
Then Paris said, “I defy you,
and I arrest you as a felon,” and Romeo, in
his anger and despair, drew his sword. They fought,
and Paris was killed.
As Romeo’s sword pierced him, Paris cried
“Oh, I am slain! If thou
be merciful, open the tomb, and lay me with Juliet!”
And Romeo said, “In faith I will.”
And he carried the dead man into the
tomb and laid him by the dear Juliet’s side.
Then he kneeled by Juliet and spoke to her, and held
her in his arms, and kissed her cold lips, believing
that she was dead, while all the while she was coming
nearer and nearer to the time of her awakening.
Then he drank the poison, and died beside his sweetheart
and wife.
Now came Friar Laurence when it was
too late, and saw all that had happened and
then poor Juliet woke out of her sleep to find her
husband and her friend both dead beside her.
The noise of the fight had brought
other folks to the place too, and Friar Laurence,
hearing them, ran away, and Juliet was left alone.
She saw the cup that had held the poison, and knew
how all had happened, and since no poison was left
for her, she drew her Romeo’s dagger and thrust
it through her heart and so, falling with
her head on her Romeo’s breast, she died.
And here ends the story of these faithful and most
unhappy lovers.
And when the old folks knew from Friar
Laurence of all that had befallen, they sorrowed exceedingly,
and now, seeing all the mischief their wicked quarrel
had wrought, they repented them of it, and over the
bodies of their dead children they clasped hands at
last, in friendship and forgiveness.