The answer to this question....
it would be... relating to the three themes involved in this play..
answer according to this would be....
LOVE
HATE
FATE
these are the three things that would describe star-crossed lovers
In my opinion, Friar Lawrence is guilty for Romeo and Juliet's death. I think he is guilty because he married Romeo and Juliet. He gave Juliet the potion, and because he didn't get the message to Romeo, I think that he should have met up with Romeo on the outside of Capulet's tomb. Or maybe he could of gone to Mantua and met with Romeo face to face.
In the play he uses a rope ladder that the nurse brings to Juliet's balcony for him. In the movie he just climbs up a tree.
Juliet, perhaps, most perfectly describes her love for Romeo by refusing to describe it: “But my true love is grown to such excess / I cannot sum up some of half my wealth” (3.1.33–34). Love, in other words, resists any single metaphor because it is too powerful to be so easily contained or understood.
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.
Friar Lawerence's plan was for Romeo to take Juliet away to Mantua with him where they could live together.
In my opinion, Friar Lawrence is guilty for Romeo and Juliet's death. I think he is guilty because he married Romeo and Juliet. He gave Juliet the potion, and because he didn't get the message to Romeo, I think that he should have met up with Romeo on the outside of Capulet's tomb. Or maybe he could of gone to Mantua and met with Romeo face to face.
After Juliet wakes up, Romeo is supposed to take her to Mantua
After Juliet wakes up, Romeo is supposed to take her to Mantua
Juliet's parents, Lord Capulet and Lady Capulet, did not approve of Romeo and Juliet's relationship and arranged for Juliet to marry Paris instead. This forced Romeo and Juliet to keep their love a secret, leading to their tragic end.
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.
Hiya, my name is Chloe. I am 12. So I think that Twilight is a modern Romeo and Juliet. That's why they hinted, by using Romeo and Juliet as one of the topics they were learning in New Moon. I myself are totally Team Jacob. You? I really like it.But modern Romeo and Juliet is a perfect way to sum up Twilight.
In the play he uses a rope ladder that the nurse brings to Juliet's balcony for him. In the movie he just climbs up a tree.
Juliet, perhaps, most perfectly describes her love for Romeo by refusing to describe it: “But my true love is grown to such excess / I cannot sum up some of half my wealth” (3.1.33–34). Love, in other words, resists any single metaphor because it is too powerful to be so easily contained or understood.
"They are but beggars that can count their worth/ But my true love is grown to such excess/ I cannot sum up half my sum of wealth" That's what she says immediately before her wedding to Romeo. Sounds like she feels infinite love for him.
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.
Juliet is the one who brings up the subject of marriage and asks Romeo to "send word tomorrow".
The story starts with a street fight between Sampson and Gregory, servants to the Capulets and Abraham and Balthasar, servants to the Montague family. And also Romeo was in love with Rosaline at the start. After he has been in a party that held by Capulate, and met Juliet, he falls in love with Juliet.