Romeo finds out that Juliet is apparently dead; he buys poison; he goes to Verona; he goes to the tomb; he meets Paris, fights and kills him; drinks poison and dies; Juliet wakes up and kills herself; the bodies are discovered; Friar Lawrence explains what happened; Montague and Capulet reconcile.
Mercutio is killed by Tybalt this happens right after Romeo secretly weds Juliet, later on I belive it is still in the same act Romeo kills Tybalt for killing Mercutio that is why he fleas to Mantua
In the final scene, Romeo kills Paris, Romeo poisons himself, and Juliet stabs herself.
Tybalt kills Mercutio and Romeo kills Tybalt.
Four: Romeo, Juliet, Paris and Lady Montague (offstage).
Romeo, Juliet, Paris and Lady Montague
There are five scenes in Romeo and Juliet which are scene 1.
You need to specify which scene 2 you are talking about--there are five of them in the play.
Romeo and Juliet express their love for one another.'profess' a plus
Romeo and Juliet is a five act play.
It's a sonnet.
There are five scenes in Romeo and Juliet which are scene 1.
Act five, the last scene of the book.
You need to specify which scene 2 you are talking about--there are five of them in the play.
I see this is in "Romeo and Juliet". But, you have to provide which act you want information on. There are five "scene 2s" and five "scene 3s".
Romeo and Juliet express their love for one another.'profess' a plus
At first the Nurse was talking Juliet into marrying Romeo, but then she changed her opinion. She then said Romeo was nothing but trouble and continued to "rip" on her husband which made Juliet very upset. Juliet (from my interpretation) feels betrayed by the Nurse who once encouraged Juliet to be with Romeo...
Nothing. She had already decided to marry Romeo if he would have her. In this scene she finds out that he will have her and he has arranged the wedding. That does not prompt a decision on Juliet's part; she has already made up her mind about what she wants to do.
Romeo and Juliet is a five act play.
It's a sonnet.
Romeo speaks to himself in the aside in "Romeo and Juliet", scene two. Asides are used so that the character can say something to the audience that the other characters are not supposed to be able to hear.
There are five scenes two and five scenes three in the play. Without knowing which act, it's hard to answer.
Romeo and Juliet was written about five years before Julius Caesar.