he uses a gun
Steal Juliets body and take it away with him.
she falls in love but is catious to weither she will be used for pleasaure and then just be thrown away. she wants to make sure romeos love is true.
You would feel very confused and conflicted being in love with your worst enemy who killed your cousin. You would also feel very afraid for the same reason.
In Act 2, Scene 4 of William Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet," when Mercutio teases Romeo about slipping away from his friends the night before, Romeo responds with evasive and playful banter. He uses wordplay and double entendre to deflect Mercutio's teasing and maintain his secret marriage to Juliet. Romeo's responses showcase his wit and ability to navigate complex social situations.
The Prince banished Romeo because he has killed Juliet's cousin and they don't want to sentence him to death. So they sent him to exile, out of Verona away from his family and friends.
Juliet fakes her death to get out of marrying Count Paris. Friar Laurence tries to get word out to Romeo that Juliet isn't really dead. But Romeo doesn't get the letter so he doesn't know that shes still alive. Romeo goes to Juliets tomb to weep over her death. When he enters Juliets tomb he finds Count Paris is also weeping over Juliets death. So Romeo, deranged by grief, murders the Count when he tries to stop romeo from (he believes) desecrating Juliets tomb. Romeos last words were "Thus with a kiss i die". He kills himself at Juliet's grave, moments before she awakes; she kills herself in turn shortly thereafter.
If you don't feel empathy for a teenaged girl who wakes up to find her husband of a couple of days, who she was hoping to meet and go away with, lying beside her dead, then probably you cannot feel empathy at all and you are a psychotic axe-murderer.
Romeo had climbed a large tree that was right behind the Capulets familys large Orchard wall so that he could get away from his drunken friends and so that he could see juliet.
Friar Lawrence's plan to fake Juliet's death in order for her to be with Romeo failed because Romeo didn't receive the message explaining the plan in time. As a result, Romeo believed Juliet was truly dead, leading to tragic consequences such as his suicide. Additionally, unforeseen events and miscommunication contributed to the plan's failure.
Balthasar tells Romeo that Juliet had just died and that he saw the Capulets at her funeral. Even though this is misinformation, Romeo believes Balthasar because he had not got the message form Friar Laurence about the plan.
Romeo drinks a poison from friar Lawrence when he saw/ thought his Juliet was dead. Romeo had just drank the poison and died when Juliet woke up from the potion that made her seem dead. Juliet could not stand to be alive without Romeo so tried to drink the poison too, but there was none left so she stabbed herself with Romeo's dagger
Paris' death is often omitted in film adaptations of "Romeo and Juliet" as it can be seen as a less essential plot point compared to the tragic ending of the two main characters. Filmmakers may choose to focus on Romeo and Juliet's love story rather than including every plot detail from Shakespeare's play. Additionally, Paris' death may not add significant value to the overall narrative arc in a movie adaptation.