She fakes her own death.
Capulet and Paris are discussing Juliet's potential marriage to Paris. Capulet wants Paris to woo Juliet and wait for her to be ready for marriage, while Paris is eager to marry her soon. Ultimately, Capulet agrees to Paris' proposal, setting the stage for the tragic events of the play.
The Friar knows that Romeo & Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. - See more at: http://www.chacha.com/question/why-is-the-friar-willing-to-become-involved-in-solving-romeo-and-juliets-marriage-problems-in-act-4-scene-1#sthash.rxpVM9Fc.dpuf The Friar knows that Romeo and Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. he Friar knows that Romeo & Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. - See more at: http://www.chacha.com/question/why-is-the-friar-willing-to-become-involved-in-solving-romeo-and-juliets-marriage-problems-in-act-4-scene-1#sthash.rxpVM9Fc.dpufhd The Friar knows that Romeo & Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. - See more at: http://www.chacha.com/question/why-is-the-friar-willing-to-become-involved-in-solving-romeo-and-juliets-marriage-problems-in-act-4-scene-1#sthash.rxpVM9Fc.dpuf The Friar knows that Romeo & Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. - See more at: http://www.chacha.com/question/why-is-the-friar-willing-to-become-involved-in-solving-romeo-and-juliets-marriage-problems-in-act-4-scene-1#sthash.rxpVM9Fc.dpuf Because he is terrified that people will find out he married Juliet to Romeo without her father's permission. Their marriage was valid in the church, but it would also have been considered illicit from the standpoint of the law. His grand plan to bring peace to the families blew up in his face, and now he has a choice between committing a sin by marrying Juliet to Paris, or TELLING, and telling would probably get him into some trouble. He can't do either one, so he comes up with another grand plan to fake Juliet's death.
Juliet goes to friar Laurence's cell for help, so she doesn't have to marry county Paris. The friar is able to give her a solution and that solution is a potion in which can give Juliet a death like sleep in which she will wake up in forty-two hours.
The Friar knows that Romeo & Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. - See more at: http://www.chacha.com/question/why-is-the-friar-willing-to-become-involved-in-solving-romeo-and-juliets-marriage-problems-in-act-4-scene-1#sthash.rxpVM9Fc.dpuf The Friar knows that Romeo and Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. he Friar knows that Romeo & Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. - See more at: http://www.chacha.com/question/why-is-the-friar-willing-to-become-involved-in-solving-romeo-and-juliets-marriage-problems-in-act-4-scene-1#sthash.rxpVM9Fc.dpufhd The Friar knows that Romeo & Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. - See more at: http://www.chacha.com/question/why-is-the-friar-willing-to-become-involved-in-solving-romeo-and-juliets-marriage-problems-in-act-4-scene-1#sthash.rxpVM9Fc.dpuf The Friar knows that Romeo & Juliet are already married when Paris comes to him in Act 4, Scene 1 of Romeo & Juliet. He tries to help Juliet so that she doesn't actually kill herself to keep from marrying Paris. - See more at: http://www.chacha.com/question/why-is-the-friar-willing-to-become-involved-in-solving-romeo-and-juliets-marriage-problems-in-act-4-scene-1#sthash.rxpVM9Fc.dpuf Because he is terrified that people will find out he married Juliet to Romeo without her father's permission. Their marriage was valid in the church, but it would also have been considered illicit from the standpoint of the law. His grand plan to bring peace to the families blew up in his face, and now he has a choice between committing a sin by marrying Juliet to Paris, or TELLING, and telling would probably get him into some trouble. He can't do either one, so he comes up with another grand plan to fake Juliet's death.
Juliet's parents, Lord Capulet and Lady Capulet, did not approve of Romeo and Juliet's relationship and arranged for Juliet to marry Paris instead. This forced Romeo and Juliet to keep their love a secret, leading to their tragic end.
The friar has a knockout potion which makes someone appear dead for 42 hours. Juliet is to take it and then after she is buried Romeo will come along 42 hours later and pick her up and take her to Mantua with him. It's a harebrained scheme. It would have worked better if the Friar had stayed by the body of Juliet until she woke up and then dressed her as a nun. Unfortunately he was too much of a coward to do this.
She treats him guardedly in the only scene where they actually speak to each other. He is all full of self-importance, imagining that she's excited to marry him. She is being deliberately vague to put him off.
In Romeo and Juliet, Tybalt kills Romeo's friend Mercutio, so Romeo kills Tybalt. Romeo kills Paris and then himself, thinking that Juliet is dead. Juliet wakes up from her sleep and, seeing Romeo dead, kills herself. At the end we find out that Romeo's mother dies because of grief over the banishment of her son.
He was motivated to keep vigil at Juliet's grave, and bring flowers. Then he was motivated to have Romeo arrested and hanged for attempting to desecrate her burial place. Paris did love Juliet. He just didn't know her very well
If you're talking about Act III scene V, its because it reveals the misinterpretation Capulet has with Juliet's grief. Juliet is grieving over Romeo being banished, but her parents interpret that she's grieving over the loss of her cousin Tybalt who was killed by Romeo. Juliet asks for her marriage to Paris to be delayed and Capulet basically goes off on her saying that he found the perfect husband for Juliet, in Paris, and now Juliet doesn't want to marry him. Keep in mind her parents are completely unaware of the fact she is married to Romeo. Her father basically says he will disown her if she does not marry Paris. This monologue also reveals the trouble Juliet is in. She's already married and now her parents, unaware she's married with someone form their enemy family, want her to marry Paris. So Juliet is in a very bad situation and her father's actions toward her make it no better.
When Lady Capulet asks Juliet how she feels about marriage, she said "It is an honor that i dream not of". Juliet isn't interested. She will give Paris a look for her mother's sake, "but no more will [she] endart [her] eye/ than [her mother] gives it consent to fly"--something like that. That's a promise she sure didn't keep.
the rising action in romeo and Juliet is when lord Capulet tells the servant to give the invitations to all the people that are on the guest list, since the servant doesn't know how to read he tries to find a person who can help him. just then romeo and his friend show up and the servant not knowing they were from the montegue family which the capulets hate, he asks them to read the list and invites them to the party.