Lady Montague dies grieving for her son. Her husband informs the Prince of her death in the Tomb Scene.
She doesn't; she gets so upset that Romeo got banished, she dies of sadness.
Lady Montague dies of grief over Romeo her only son being banished from Verona.
Lady Capulet does not die. Lady Montague dies 'from grief' over Romeo being banished. This is from Act 5 scene iii:MONTAGUE: Alas, my liege, my wife is dead to-night;Grief of my son's exile hath stopp'd her breath:What further woe conspires against mine age?
Romeo's mother.
Mercutio, the first to go, dies within minutes of his stabbing by Tybalt. Tybalt dies almost immediately upon Romeo stabbing him. Paris dies soon after Romeo stabs him in the churchyard. Lady Montague dies offstage; how long she lingers is not reported. Romeo dies within seconds of drinking the poison, and Juliet dies soon after stabbing herself with Romeo's knife.
In "Romeo and Juliet," at the end of the play, Lady Montague, Romeo's mother, dies because of grief over her son's banishment. Lord Capulet, Juliet's father, also dies from shock and grief over his daughter's apparent suicide.
She doesn't; she gets so upset that Romeo got banished, she dies of sadness.
Lady Montague dies of grief over Romeo her only son being banished from Verona.
conflict - it is a grieving mother receiving a letter after her son has been blown to bits in the war. He was not an honourable soldier, he was cowardly. The mother sees her 'glorious boy' being a soldier to thank, for protecting the country but the officers do not agree.
No. Lady Montague was so devastated when Romeo was banished, she died before he came back to kill him himself with Juliet. His father had no one left after Romeo died. I believe he talks about it the last act, last scene.
Lady Capulet does not die. Lady Montague dies 'from grief' over Romeo being banished. This is from Act 5 scene iii:MONTAGUE: Alas, my liege, my wife is dead to-night;Grief of my son's exile hath stopp'd her breath:What further woe conspires against mine age?
Romeo dies first.
Romeo's mother.
Romeo dies (commits suicide). Then Juliet dies (also suicide).
Romeo was the son of Lord Montague in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet."
Mercutio, the first to go, dies within minutes of his stabbing by Tybalt. Tybalt dies almost immediately upon Romeo stabbing him. Paris dies soon after Romeo stabs him in the churchyard. Lady Montague dies offstage; how long she lingers is not reported. Romeo dies within seconds of drinking the poison, and Juliet dies soon after stabbing herself with Romeo's knife.
In Romeo and Juliet, Tybalt kills Romeo's friend Mercutio, so Romeo kills Tybalt. Romeo kills Paris and then himself thinking that Juliet in dead. Juliet wakes up from her sleep seeing Romeo dead kills herself. At the end we find out that Romeo's mother dies because of grief over the banishment of her son.