Lady Capulet does not want to kill Romeo. She is Juliet's mother and does not harbor any intent to harm Romeo in the story of Romeo and Juliet.
Tybalt's cousin Juliet asks Prince Escalus to sentence Romeo to death after he kills her cousin Tybalt.
She says that if her mother finds someone to carry it Juliet will mi it herself
Tybalt is not planning to forget that Romeo intruded into the Capulet's ball, and he will get REVENGE! Lol He is disgusted by him. PS- Betty Rollin's Legs :D
They will kill him
Benvolio, Nurse, Capulet, Lady Capulet, Montague, Lady Montague, Friar John, Friar Lawrence, Apothecary, Balthasar Actually Lady Montague dies from what the play says grief from Romeo's death.
Tybalt wanted to kill Romeo because he felt that Romeo disrespected his family and their feud by attending the Capulet's party. Tybalt was a passionate and hot-headed character who believed that harming Romeo would be a way to uphold the honor of the Capulet family.
It incites Romeo into killing Tybalt. The death of Tybalt not only get Romeo banished but makes it very unlikely that Lady Capulet will ever accept his marriage to Juliet. She would certainly have Romeo killed if she knew (she is planning to kill him anyway).
Romeo had to kill someone, in order for the sequence of events to happen properly. Tybalt has been set up as a quarrelsome man who imagines that he has a grudge against Romeo for crashing Capulet's party (Capulet didn't seem to mind) and so will inevitably create a fight, which creates the occasion for Romeo to kill him.
The Prince says it when sentencing Romeo to banishment. " let Romeo hence in haste, Else, when he's found, that hour is his last. Bear hence this body and attend our will: Mercy but murders, pardoning those that kill." The Prince has been asked to take bloodthirsty revenge on Romeo by Lady Capulet and to pardon him by Montague. The Prince believes Benvolio's evidence and not the frantic accusations of Lady Capulet, and believes Romeo to be essentially innocent. That is why he does not sentence him to death. But, as he explains in this line, he cannot let Romeo go unpunished. If you go around pardoning out of mercy those that kill, you end up with a lot more people killing. Your mercy may save the life of this killer but not the lives of those who others will think they can kill with impunity.
It is actually Tybalt who informs Lord Capulet of the unwanted guest. Tybalt wants to kill him but Lord Capulet orders him not to make a scene at the party because, despite there enmity, Romeo is well liked in the community and it would tarnish his reputation.
Lady Capulet in particular is really vengeful over the death of Tybalt and begs the Prince to have Romeo executed. The Prince was bound to take some action against Romeo, which would get in the way of his relationship with Juliet. Even when the Prince gives Romeo the lighter sentence of banishment, Lady Capulet intends to hire murderers to kill Romeo. And whatever action is taken, getting Lady Capulet to acquiesce in a marriage between Romeo and Juliet is now out of the question, so if they are to live together, they will have to do so without her family's blessing. Lord Capulet, on the other hand, is less interested in revenge. However, the death of Tybalt causes him to want to cheer Juliet up, which makes him push his project of marrying her to Paris. His pressure to get on with the wedding is the cause of Juliet's going along with the Friar's crack-brained scheme and its disastrous results.
In Act 1 Scene 1 Benvolio is sent on a fact-finding mission by Romeo's parents to find out where he has been and what he has been doing. When Benvolio finds out, he recommends going to the Capulet party where Romeo can meet girls.