Read the excerpts from ovid’s "pyramus and thisbe" and shakespeare’s romeo and juliet. "pyramus and thisbe" she recognized her own shawl and his dagger's ivory sheath. she cried: "dear boy, you died by your own hand: your love has killed you. but i, too, command the force to face at least this task: i can claim love, and it will give me strength enough to strike myself. i'll follow you in death; and men will say that iâ€"unfortunateâ€" was both the cause and comrade of your fate. nothing but death could sever you from me; but now death has no power to prevent my joining you. i call upon his parents and mine; i plead for him and meâ€"do not deny to usâ€"united by true love, who share this fatal momentâ€"one same tomb. and may you, mulberry, whose boughs now shade one wretched body and will soon shade two, forever bear these darkly colored fruits as signs of our sad end, that men remember the death we met together." romeo and juliet gregory: say better; here comes one of my master's kinsmen. sampson: yes, better, sir. abraham: you lie. sampson: draw, if you be men.--gregory, remember thy swashing blow. [they fight.] [enter benvolio.] benvolio: part, fools! put up your swords; you know not what you do. [beats down their swords.] how is the setting from ovid’s "pyramus and thisbe" similar to romeo and juliet?