It helps if you quote all of the words Juliet says. "If he be married, my grave is like to be my marriage bed." In other words, if he is already married, I will die before I am married myself. Why? Because Juliet remembers, even if some of the other characters in the play do not, that according to the Catholic religion, people are only allowed to be married to one person at a time. Juliet has met Romeo, flirted with him, and kissed him, but she does not know who he is. So she sends the Nurse to find out ("Go ask his name.") She would like to marry him and so hopes that he does not have a wife already, because as far as she is concerned, he is the only guy for her.
It is Juliet.
Juliet...meaning she will die if she finds out that Romeo might be married.
she says she loves him
This quote is said by Juliet talking to the nurse, after Juliet has just met Romeo. Juliet is saying that if Romeo is already married, she will kill herself. This line is also an example of foreshadowing.
In Scene 5, when Juliet wants the nurse to find out who Romeo is: "Go ask his name: if he be married. My grave is like to be my wedding bed." That is verbal irony because the audience already knows that her grave IS going to be her wedding bed---they know she's going to die.
Paris married Juliet for money in Romeo and Juliet.
Juliet...meaning she will die if she finds out that Romeo might be married.
she says she loves him
This quote is said by Juliet talking to the nurse, after Juliet has just met Romeo. Juliet is saying that if Romeo is already married, she will kill herself. This line is also an example of foreshadowing.
I'm not positive this is the one your looking for but... "Go ask his name: if he be married. My grave is like to be my wedding bed."
The most famous quote from Romeo and Juliet is by Juliet saying 'Romeo, Romeo, where fore art thou Romeo' which basically means 'Romeo Romeo why are you Romeo'
Friar Lawrence says this line in Act 5, Scene 3 of Romeo and Juliet. He is referring to Romeo expressing his grief over Juliet's death and stating that he would rather be considered a fool if he were "married" to Juliet's grave (forever mourning her).
Nobody did. The quotation "I would the fool were married to her grave" is from the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare.
In Romeo and Juliet, the wedding of Romeo and Juliet quickly turns into a funeral when Tybalt is killed by Romeo in a duel. This event sets off a series of tragic misunderstandings and deaths, leading to the untimely demise of both Romeo and Juliet.
Romeo is the one who lays flowers on Juliet's grave in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet."
Romeo and Juliet's Wedding Datemarch 11 1302
In Scene 5, when Juliet wants the nurse to find out who Romeo is: "Go ask his name: if he be married. My grave is like to be my wedding bed." That is verbal irony because the audience already knows that her grave IS going to be her wedding bed---they know she's going to die.
Romeo and Juliet get married.