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Romeo is the one who lays flowers on Juliet's grave in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet."
He has come to put flowers on Juliet's grave.
Juliet...meaning she will die if she finds out that Romeo might be married.
He says that he will die with her.
Friar Lawrence says this line in Act 5, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet. He is referring to Romeo expressing his grief over Juliet's death and stating that he would rather be considered a fool if he were "married" to Juliet's grave (forever mourning her).
One of Paris's servants came with him.
Juliet is expressing a belief that she will likely die before she gets to marry Romeo, and thus her grave will be the place where they will be united in death instead of in marriage. This line foreshadows the tragic ending of the play, where both Romeo and Juliet die.
Nobody did. The quotation "I would the fool were married to her grave" is from the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare.
Mercutio says, "Ask for me tomorrow and you shall find me a grave man."
she says she loves him
Paris doesn't really love Juliet. His feelings for Juliet are as conventional as Romeo's were for Rosaline. Paris does not know Juliet; he has not spent any time talking to her; he does not seem to want to bother about finding out what she wants. This is not love. When they meet at Friar Lawrence's cell, he takes it for granted that she must love him and does not pay any attention to the signals she is giving that she does not. After her supposed death, Paris acts as he supposes that a man ought to act in his position. He buys flowers to put on her grave and spouts bad poetry. He does all this about a woman we know he barely knew. Also, even if Paris loved Juliet, Juliet didn't even like him, and that is not true love.
An example is the coincidence that in Act 5 Scene3 Romeo goes to visit Juliet at the grave at the same time that PAris does