The apothecary is a very small character who has four very short lines. Romeo gives a pretty good description of him, which boils down to the fact that he is very poor, desperately poor. His shop is full of unsaleable items like stuffed aligators and things past their best-before date, which are spread out over the shelves to cover up the fact that he cannot afford new stock, and has been trying to collect it himself from the wild.
All we know about his character is that he is essentially a good man, but his desperate condition induces him to do something which he knows to be wrong. He sums this up neatly in the phrase "my poverty but not my will consents."
The Apothecary in Romeo and Juliet is depicted as poor and desperate, willing to sell poison to Romeo despite the consequences. He is shown as a morally ambiguous character, driven by economic necessity rather than ethical considerations.
The apothecary in "Romeo and Juliet" received a death sentence for selling poison to Romeo.
The apothecary says this when he sells Romeo poison.
Romeo kills himself with poison bought from the apothecary and Juliet stabs herself with Romeo's dagger.
The apothecary's shop in Romeo and Juliet is depicted as a place of poverty and desperation. It is where Romeo goes to buy the poison that ultimately leads to both his and Juliet's tragic demise. The apothecary himself is presented as a morally conflicted character willing to sell the poison due to his dire circumstances.
The kind of argument that makes a nice metallic clinking sound when you put a bag of it on the table. Romeo's argument with the apothecary is money.
Because I am old and poor, I'd be the Apothecary.
Romeo buys poison from an apothecary in Mantua to take his own life after learning of Juliet's apparent death in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet."
Romeo visits the apothecary to purchase poison in order to take his own life after hearing false news that Juliet is dead. He believes that death is the only way to be with Juliet, as he cannot imagine living without her.
Romeo thinks Juliet is dead Doesn't want to live without her The apothecary is poor, gets paid
Romeo says this line in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." It is his final words before taking his own life.
Romeo try to buy some poison for apothecary for some money, Balthazar is trying to stop him from doing it but, Romeo doesn't care.
Apart from telling Romeo that Juliet is not really dead, giving the apothecary a whole bunch of money so he doesn't have to sell poisons in order to get his next meal might work.