Re: Marvel crew lock
No. I believe Romeo was too caught up in his own family war to even consider a peaceable solution to his situation with Juliet. Surely, that should have been his first thought, but it wasn't. His family feud had much more permanence than a girl, too. In the end, he would have tired of Juliet as he did of Rosalind.
Robin Hood is, by definition, an antihero, and so he still qualifies. His motives are entirely altruistic, but they are not peaceable. If he could cower and cripple the wealthy, he would in an instant. Could it not be argued that he is more honest than all the rest? Or is doing the right thing a romantic notion in your estimation?
Darcy has no inner peace. He spend the entire body of the work warring with his own pride. He gives in to his all-encompassing need to possess Elizabeth, and while I concede that he was looking to quench his own desires - or, as you say, obtain inner peace - his peace is still not what you were referring to.
Beowulf was set in a place that valued little less than peace.
And here I thought I would be only person with a comic book hero in my head that had cut their fingers on a page in their lifetime. My name is Maren. It is very nice to make your acquaintance, Sir.