Romeo and Juliet — Act 5, Scene 3: A churchyard; in it a tomb belonging to the Capulets.

In the churchyard, Paris arrives with his page to mourn Juliet at the Capulet tomb and sends the boy away with a torch. He is still grieving when Romeo enters with Balthasar, intent on opening the tomb and taking Juliet’s ring. Paris mistakes Romeo’s arrival for a criminal act, confronts him, and they fight; Paris is killed and asks to be laid beside Juliet. Romeo then enters the tomb, finds Juliet’s body, and drinks poison after speaking his farewell. Friar Laurence arrives too late, discovers Romeo and Paris dead, and urges Juliet to leave, but she refuses, sees Romeo’s empty poison cup, and stabs herself. The watch and the Prince arrive, hear Friar Laurence’s explanation, and learn the whole story from Romeo’s letter and Balthasar’s testimony.