The Sonnet
Language
Act 1,
Scene Prologue
Lines 1-14
[Before the real action of the play begins, a single actor (referred to as a chorus) comes to the front of the stage to deliver this introductory prologue to the play]
Chorus
This prologue is a formal poem. It’s in the form of a sonnet, which was primarily used in romance poetry. In a typical sonnet, the poem's speaker describes his love for a woman.
A sonnet consists of three four-line stanzas and a rhyming couplet. This sonnet has a typical rhyming scheme: dignity, scene, mutiny, unclean … foes, life, overthrows, strife … love, rage, remove, stage … and finally: attend, mend.
You may have noticed that in the third stanza, with our modern pronunciation, love and remove do not rhyme — but apparently they did in Shakespeare’s England.