"Open the tomb and lay me with Juliet." Romeo does it too.
To put him next to his love (Juliet). He says, "If thou be merciful, open the tomb, lay me with Juliet". But he only asks this once he has been fatally wounded by Romeo. Romeo had no wish or intent to kill Paris but did after Paris attacked him.
Paris, although he is hiding as opposed to being in plain sight only because Romeo has arrived. It would be better to ask, "Who hides in the graveyard after Romeo arrives?"
A guy called Paris, who is a Count no less, has expressed an interest in Juliet as a possible wife, and has approached her father on the subject. Her mother tells her this, and when Juliet says she is not really interested in boys but she is prepared to be obedient, her mother asks her to check out Paris at the party they are throwing that night, and give some thought as to whether she might like to marry him. Unfortunately she does become really interested in boys all of a sudden, but it's not Paris who takes her fancy but Romeo.
Count Paris visits Lord Capulet in Act I, Scene II, of Romeo and Juliet, to ask Lord Capulet for Juliet's hand in marriage. Lord Capulet stalls, telling him to wait until Juliet is older.
Juliet goes to Friar Laurence's cell in the play twice. The first is to marry Romeo and the second is after she learns of her prospective marriage to the County Paris. The latter time she seeks his help to stop the marriage from happening so that she may remain faithful to her Romeo and bee reunited with him.
In the 1996 version of Romeo and Juliet, she did not love Paris, but it seemed that Paris loved Juliet or was deeply obseesed with her that he would ask for her hand in marriage.
To put him next to his love (Juliet). He says, "If thou be merciful, open the tomb, lay me with Juliet". But he only asks this once he has been fatally wounded by Romeo. Romeo had no wish or intent to kill Paris but did after Paris attacked him.
Romeo asks for forgiveness from Paris before killing himself in the tomb alongside Juliet.
Paris, although he is hiding as opposed to being in plain sight only because Romeo has arrived. It would be better to ask, "Who hides in the graveyard after Romeo arrives?"
Paris, although he is hiding as opposed to being in plain sight only because Romeo has arrived. It would be better to ask, "Who hides in the graveyard after Romeo arrives?"
A guy called Paris, who is a Count no less, has expressed an interest in Juliet as a possible wife, and has approached her father on the subject. Her mother tells her this, and when Juliet says she is not really interested in boys but she is prepared to be obedient, her mother asks her to check out Paris at the party they are throwing that night, and give some thought as to whether she might like to marry him. Unfortunately she does become really interested in boys all of a sudden, but it's not Paris who takes her fancy but Romeo.
Count Paris visits Lord Capulet in Act I, Scene II, of Romeo and Juliet, to ask Lord Capulet for Juliet's hand in marriage. Lord Capulet stalls, telling him to wait until Juliet is older.
muslims may ask allah for help when they are dying
If I'm the king of France, and the play is Shakespeare's All's Well that Ends Well, then the answer is Helena, although she came to give help as well as get it. If I'm a totally different king of France and the play is Shakespeare's Henry VI Part 1, then the answer is Joan La Pucelle (Joan of Arc). But if by Paris you mean not the city but the character in Romeo and Juliet then the question makes no sense. Even if the question was "Who came to Paris (the person in Romeo and Juliet) to ask for HIS help" the answer is "nobody".
Juliet asked Friar Laurence to help her avoid marrying Paris by giving her a plan to fake her death so she could be with Romeo instead.
Juliet asks Friar Lawrence for help in marrying Romeo in secret.
Paris asks Lord Capulet for his daughter Juliet's hand in marriage in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet".