The characters of Romeo and Juliet have been depicted in literature, music, dance, and theatre. The appeal of the young hero and heroineтАФwhose families, the Montagues and the Capulets, respectively, are implacable enemiesтАФis such that they have become, in the popular imagination, the representative type of star-crossed lovers. Shakespeare sets the scene in Verona, Italy. Juliet and Romeo meet and fall instantly in love at a masked ball of the Capulets, and they profess their love when Romeo, unwilling to leave, climbs the wall into the orchard garden of her familyтАЩs house and finds her alone at her window. Because their well-to-do families are enemies, the two are married secretly by Friar Laurence. When Tybalt, a Capulet, seeks out Romeo in revenge for the insult of RomeoтАЩs having dared to shower his attention on Juliet, an ensuing scuffle ends in the death of RomeoтАЩs dearest friend, Mercutio. Impelled by a code of honor among men, Romeo kills Tybalt and is banished to Mantua by the Prince of Verona, who has been insistent that the family feuding cease. When JulietтАЩs father, unaware that Juliet is already secretly married, arranges a marriage with the eminently eligible Count Paris, the young bride seeks out Friar Laurence for assistance in her desperate situation. He gives her a potion that will make her appear to be dead and proposes that she take it and that Romeo rescue her. She complies. Romeo, however, unaware of the friarтАЩs scheme because a letter has failed to reach him, returns to Verona on hearing of JulietтАЩs apparent death. He encounters a grieving Paris at JulietтАЩs tomb, reluctantly kills him when Paris attempts to prevent Romeo from entering the tomb, and finds Juliet in the burial vault. There he gives her a last kiss and kills himself with poison. Juliet awakens, sees the dead Romeo, and kills herself. The families learn what has happened and end their feud.