No. Juliet 'dies' the night before the wedding.
to help marry him and Juliet
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.
Paris has come to mourn Juliet, who he intended to marry. The Friar is hoping to get to Juliet before Romeo does
he was a good man
Paris, at the very beginning of Act IV.
He gives Juliet a potion will make her seem to be dead on the wedding day.
The Friar knows that Juliet is already married. He doesn't want to have to refuse to marry her to Paris in a public way. His plan not only helps Juliet, it also gets him off the hook.
when she encounters paris and the friar, paris is still under the impression that he is going to marry juliet; however, juliet is already secretly married to romeo. So the dramatic irony is that we know juliet has a plan to get out of marrying paris and that she's already married, but paris does not know any of this
She says she is going to confession, but she is really going for help. The friar helped her to marry Romeo, and now she is asking him for help to prevent her from marrying Paris.
The Friar tells Paris that Juliet is too young to marry and mentions that the mourning period for Tybalt, her cousin, is delaying the wedding.
Lady Capulet mistakenly thinks her daughter will be overjoyed that she has received her first proposal of marriage from Paris. Juliet, who is madly in love with Romeo, is not at all happy to hear the news. In fact, this announcements sets the events in play that will bring about the play's ultimate tragedy.
He gives her a potion which will make her appear to be dead.