Mercutio. Here are all the characters deaths in order 1. Mercutio (killed by Tybalt) 2. Tybalt (killed by Romeo) 3. Lady Montague (of grief after Romeo was exiled) 4. Paris (I'm not sure how he died) 5. Romeo (commited suicide) 6. Juliet (commited suicide)
in the final scene, both romeo and Juliet die.
Between Romeo and Juliet, Juliet was the second to die. But the second person in the play to die was Tybalt. Mercutio was the first. Juliet was the fifth or possibly the sixth, depending on exactly when Lady M died.
It talks about a poison that romeo shall drink and die from. At the end, Romeo does die from a poison he drinks.
first off it is with a kiss i die not you because romeo dies and romeo says that.
It's in Act III Scene 1, somewhere around line 130, depending on your edition.
in the final scene, both romeo and Juliet die.
In Act 5 of Romeo and Juliet, Romeo, Juliet, Paris, and Mercutio all die. Romeo dies by drinking poison, Juliet dies by stabbing herself, Paris dies in a duel with Romeo, and Mercutio dies during a street fight with Tybalt.
Romeo dies first.
they die
They all die in Act V scene 3.
Between Romeo and Juliet, Juliet was the second to die. But the second person in the play to die was Tybalt. Mercutio was the first. Juliet was the fifth or possibly the sixth, depending on exactly when Lady M died.
Romeo and Juliet are just characters in a play and did not exist in our world. In the play they die in Act 5.
Act 5 Scene 3. That's when Paris and Romeo die too.
Juliet dies in Act 5 of William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet."
It talks about a poison that romeo shall drink and die from. At the end, Romeo does die from a poison he drinks.
In Act 3, Romeo declares his willingness to die rather than be separated from Juliet when he says, "And, for that offence, immediately we do exile him henceβ (3.1.188). Juliet also expresses her willingness to die rather than be separated from Romeo when she says, "If all else fail, myself have power to die" (3.5.242). Both Romeo and Juliet are willing to go to extreme lengths to avoid being separated from each other.
In Act V of Romeo and Juliet, the conflict of person versus the unknown is reflected in Romeo's lines when he enters the Capulet tomb and encounters what he believes to be real death, "Here's to my love! O true apothecary! / Thy drugs are quick. Thus with a kiss I die." This moment encapsulates Romeo facing the unknown of his own mortality in the pursuit of love.