Tybalt. Benvolio says, "Tybalt, the kinsman to old Capulet, hath sent a letter to his father's house" , Mercutio responds "A challenge, on my life", and Benvolio then says, "Romeo will answer it."
The letter is a calculated insult, intended to challenge Romeo to fight with Tybalt. Benvolio's opinion is that Romeo will "answer" the challenge, which is to say, that he will accept it and fight Tybalt. When Tybalt and Romeo arrive on the scene later Tybalt again tries to challenge Romeo by saying "Thou art a villain" (This is a pretty feeble insult but then Tybalt is not known for having any kind of brain.)
You can compare the scene in Twelfth Night where Sir Andrew has been goaded into issuing a challenge to Cesario by Sir Toby. The insulting letter, which he hopes Cesario will answer, is so lame that Sir Toby decides not to send it at all.
no, because the note that frier lawerance sends for romeo dose not get to him, so when romeo finds out about Juliet he kills himself, and then when Juliet comes back and sees romeo dead she kills herself aswell. : (
Nothing, but Friar Lawrence sends him a note, once Romeo is in Mantua, to come and get Juliet from the Capulet tomb in 42 hours. This is so that they can both escape Verona and live happily ever after :)
The Friar had it planned to advise Romeo by a note, but the note never got through which led to Romeo killing himself.
there was an intended note for romeo to tell him that Juliet had infact not died. however romeo didnt get the note and that is what cause romeo to kill himself and Juliet to be left by herself
Friar Lawrence sent the note to Romeo on the same day of Juliet's supposed death.
Juliet has "died" and he can't stand the pain he endures without her. So her tell Balthasar to give the note to Lord Montigue. so that he may kill himself.
Tybalt wrote a letter to Romeo, challenging him to a duel. Tybalt was angry that Romeo had invaded the Capulets' party but he wasn't able to fight him then and there because he had been stopped by Capulet, his uncle.
The Capulet's illiterate servant asks Romeo, not knowing who he is, to read it to him.
Romeo returns without having received the friar's note and thinks that Juliet is really dead. He kills Paris and then drinks poison when he sees Juliet dead in her tomb. Juliet wakes up from the sleeping potion she drank and sees Romeo dead. She kills herself with his sword.
Tybalt. Benvolio says, "Tybalt, the kinsman to old Capulet, hath sent a letter to his father's house" , Mercutio responds "A challenge, on my life", and Benvolio then says, "Romeo will answer it." The letter is a calculated insult, intended to challenge Romeo to fight with Tybalt. Benvolio's opinion is that Romeo will "answer" the challenge, which is to say, that he will accept it and fight Tybalt. When Tybalt and Romeo arrive on the scene later Tybalt again tries to challenge Romeo by saying "Thou art a villain" (This is a pretty feeble insult but then Tybalt is not known for having any kind of brain.) You can compare the scene in Twelfth Night where Sir Andrew has been goaded into issuing a challenge to Cesario by Sir Toby. The insulting letter, which he hopes Cesario will answer, is so lame that Sir Toby decides not to send it at all.
It would be more likely if they actually disclosed it to their families. As it was, no member of their families even knew about it until they were dead. It is actually apparent that the leaders of the families, Capulet and Montague, would be delighted to make peace. They are not the ones who start the fights. Please note that the fight in Act 1 Scene 1 is caused by the servants of Capulet and Montague, who are not Capulets and Montagues themselves. Tybalt, in particular, is the son of Mrs. Capulet's brother and is not a Capulet himself. Benvolio is a Montague alright but he is trying to stop the fight. Eventually Montague and Capulet get drawn into a fight they didn't start. In the next scene, Capulet sounds relieved by the Prince's edict, so long as it applies to both families. "But Montague is bound as well as I, in penalty alike, and 'tis not hard, I think, for men so old as we to keep the peace." Again, in Act 1 Scene 5, it is Tybalt the non-Capulet that wants to fight with Romeo because he is a Montague. Capulet tells him to go to, and that he is a saucy boy for wanting to fight with someone so obviously well-behaved and well spoken of as Romeo. Capulet shows nothing but admiration for Romeo. In Act 3, Scene 1 we again have a fight breaking out between non-Capulet Tybalt and non-Montague Mercutio, who is actually related to the Prince. He just hangs with the Montagues. In Romeo's trial, it is Mrs. Capulet who is ranting on about giving Romeo the death penalty for killing Tybalt. Capulet says not a word. Perhaps he is privately thinking "Good riddance" but dares not say so with his wife there. Finally, in the last Act, more fighting breaks out between Paris and Romeo. Paris is another one of the Prince's kinsmen, another non-Capulet, and insists on fighting Romeo, no matter how Romeo pleads for him to go away and leave him alone. The Montagues don't figure as much in the story as the Capulets do, but it is worth noting that Rosaline, the girl Romeo is after before he meets Juliet, is in fact Juliet's first cousin on her father's side, and therefore a Capulet. And Romeo's cousin, the Montague Benvolio, thinks this is perfectly OK. All of this leads me to believe that if Romeo and Juliet had told their parents of their love for each other, their fathers (although perhaps not Juliet's mother) would likely have said, "Great idea! And thank God, it will put an end to this stupid feud!"
He gives him a letter explaining everything that happened and why Romeo is committing suicide. It's a suicide note.