I think becuase romeos father and juliets father were from diffeent kingdoms? and romeos parents and uncles had caused a big mashup with juliets family by killing one of their brothers or something. and theyve always had conflicts. like that
Actually, Romeo and Juliet's parents did nothing to prevent their children from getting married. They may well have done so had they been asked, but they were never asked. The news that they had been married came as a total surprise to their parents after their deaths. Romeo and Juliet got married secretly because they assumed that their parents would object.
After she finds Romeo dead from the poison she kills herself: Yea, noise? then I'll be brief. O happy dagger!Snatching ROMEO's dagger This is thy sheath;Stabs herself there rust, and let me die. The noise was the sound of people coming. The dagger, normally in a sheath on Romeo's belt, finds a new sheath, Juliet's body, where it would eventually go rusty.
When Romeo finds out that Juliet is 'Dead' he goes to see her in her tomb, and as Paris is there, he tries to stop him from seeing her, thus Romeo kills him.
The antagonist in the play would be The Capulet Family or the Montague family since they would not let Romeo and Juliet be married since the ancient feud and that's why they had to get married without their families knowing.
Juliet's parents, especially her mother, build a hate campaign against Juliet's husband, but this is because Juliet has kept secrets from them and has effectively abandoned them. Romeo and Juliet separate, but this is their joint decision in the hope that ultimately they will be reunited; he does not abandon her. The nurse becomes estranged from Juliet after suggesting that Juliet should abandon Romeo and marry Paris; Juliet chooses to let go of the Nurse as a result. It is Friar Lawrence who leaves the tomb and Juliet when the guards are coming who really abandons her, and he is the only person to do so. As a result she has the opportunity to commit suicide.
Juliet then let Romeo have sex with her. She was pretty eager for it too.
Actually, Romeo and Juliet's parents did nothing to prevent their children from getting married. They may well have done so had they been asked, but they were never asked. The news that they had been married came as a total surprise to their parents after their deaths. Romeo and Juliet got married secretly because they assumed that their parents would object.
Nobody ever suggests to Capulet that Juliet should marry Romeo. They assume that because Romeo and Juliet's families are both enemies for a reason they no longer can remember, it would be an insult to the family if Juliet's father let her marry Romeo. But Capulet might have agreed to the marriage if he had been asked. He says, "Romeo, is it? . . .'A bears him like a portly gentleman, and, to say truth, Verona brags of him to be a virtuous and well-governed youth."
After she finds Romeo dead from the poison she kills herself: Yea, noise? then I'll be brief. O happy dagger!Snatching ROMEO's dagger This is thy sheath;Stabs herself there rust, and let me die. The noise was the sound of people coming. The dagger, normally in a sheath on Romeo's belt, finds a new sheath, Juliet's body, where it would eventually go rusty.
The health officials of Mantua wouldn't let anyone get in or out of the the city because of an infectious plague. This prevented Romeo from hearing about Juliet's plan.
When Romeo finds out that Juliet is 'Dead' he goes to see her in her tomb, and as Paris is there, he tries to stop him from seeing her, thus Romeo kills him.
The antagonist in the play would be The Capulet Family or the Montague family since they would not let Romeo and Juliet be married since the ancient feud and that's why they had to get married without their families knowing.
Friar Lawrence said this line in Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." He says, "These violent delights have violent ends and in their triumph die, like fire and powder, which, as they kiss, consume."
Juliet's parents, especially her mother, build a hate campaign against Juliet's husband, but this is because Juliet has kept secrets from them and has effectively abandoned them. Romeo and Juliet separate, but this is their joint decision in the hope that ultimately they will be reunited; he does not abandon her. The nurse becomes estranged from Juliet after suggesting that Juliet should abandon Romeo and marry Paris; Juliet chooses to let go of the Nurse as a result. It is Friar Lawrence who leaves the tomb and Juliet when the guards are coming who really abandons her, and he is the only person to do so. As a result she has the opportunity to commit suicide.
He is still not sure that Juliet realy loves him. If he reveals himself, she may call the guards and have him killed.
We know from the prologue that Romeo and Juliet are going to die from the line "do with their deaths bury their parents' strife." For that matter you could guess it from the title, since it is called the Lamentable Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, and the main characters in a tragedy end up dead. But that does not explain how they die--they could be murdered or die by accident in the course of the play just as easily. It is only when Romeo buys the poison from the apothecary that we see that suicide is in the air, and we do not know for sure that they both commit suicide until we see it on stage.
Juliet's dad want let her see Romeo.