I think that was the impression Shakespeare was trying to give by calling them "star-crossed lovers" in the Prologue and also calling their love "death-marked", by having Romeo call himself "Fortune's Fool", and by having the characters have premonitions from time to time. After all, if you really want to blame someone for something you will always be able to find some reason to do so (ask a personal injury lawyer). People like to blame Romeo or Juliet or Friar Lawrence or everybody in Verona for what happened, but really they couldn't help falling for each other and once they did, things were more likely than not to go wrong.
Romeo isn't destined to marry anyone. He does fall in love with Juliet. Juliet is the one that is destined to marry Paris.
No, the nurse does not die in the Romeo and Juliet Play.
Romeo poisons himself. Juliet stabs herself.
ID 1290160492 is incorrect in why did Paris die in Romeo and Juliet because using information I discovered that Paris indeed died in Romeo and Juliet
She shoots herself.
Romeo isn't destined to marry anyone. He does fall in love with Juliet. Juliet is the one that is destined to marry Paris.
No, the nurse does not die in the Romeo and Juliet Play.
In Romeo and Juliet, Juliet Capulet falls in love with Romeo Montague. The love is destined to fail. It lasts less than two weeks and results in the deaths of several people, including Romeo and Juliet.
In the prologue of Romeo and Juliet, the line "A pair of star-crossed lovers take their life" suggests that Romeo and Juliet are destined to meet a tragic end. This line implies that their fate is predetermined and that their love is doomed.
because at the end both romeo and Juliet die
Romeo poisons himself. Juliet stabs herself.
It shows that Juliet and Romeo were destined to be just as it says in the Prolauge
Both Romeo and Juliet die, briefly, Romeo believes Juliet to be dead, so he drinks some poison, then when Juliet finds Romeo dead, she stabs herself with his dagger. Paris also dies, killed by Romeo. And Tybalt and Mercutio earlier on. And Mrs. Montague dies offstage
Yes, in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," the two main characters Romeo and Juliet both end up dying by suicide. Romeo drinks poison, believing Juliet is dead, and Juliet stabs herself upon waking to find Romeo dead.
Romeo dies first.
he was poisned or stabbed
no