Friar Lawrence’s second monologue occurs during the morning of the wedding day of Juliet and Paris, a little after the Capulets find their daughter “dead”. He comforts the Capulets by saying that Juliet has achieved the highest form of happiness by dying and entering heaven. However, this monologue foreshadows Juliet’s future death with her lover but both the audience and the Friar know that Juliet isn’t dead and is merely sleeping. In a previous scene, Friar Lawrence devised a plan to help Juliet get to Romeo and gives her a sleeping potion that would make her appear dead for two days. One could speculate that Friar Lawrence only wanted to rise in power and gain recognition by making peace between the Capulets and Montagues. If he had actually…
Romeo and Juliet is a tragic play about two people who fall in love but their families are enemies and it is keeping them from being together. The characters Romeo, Juliet and Friar Lawrence are primarily responsible for the death of Romeo and Juliet because they all went against something that the families did not want.…
Imagine three dead people laying in a tomb together, two bloody and the other a pale green. This scenario is the climax and the end of William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet. But that leaves the question, who actually “killed” Romeo and Juliet? Friar Laurence caused the death of Romeo and Juliet, as he married them to try and bring a truce between the two feuding families…
The most trusted Friar Lawrence clarifies the mishaps and misunderstanding of Romeo and Juliet (5.3.238-278). Before the speech, a tragic moment occurred in which a pair of lovers take their own life away. This describes how Romeo and Juliet take their life because of the hate between the 2 households. Both of them know that their households are great enemies but they can’t forget each other. The resected and loyal Friar explains the play in this speech. He starts from the beginning of when they are husband and wife till the end of…
After Romeo got kicked out of Verona, Juliet was upset and didn’t know what to do, so friar was keeping Romeo in the basement until Juliet came to see him. The priest told them the plan that Romeo had to go to a different town to live until he got the prince to let him back in Verona. Juliet was upset because Romeo was kicked out of Verona, but her father thought she was sad because of Tybalt’s death. So he arranged a marriage not knowing that she already married to Romeo. Juliet said she didn’t want to marry Paris. Her father got really angry and told her she will marry him or be kicked out of the house. “Go home, be careful, say you will marry him, sleep alone without the nurse, drink this vile of liquid that will put you in a death-like coma for 42 hours. Then, when you go in the family vault when the 42 hours are up, Romeo and I will be there to get you to Mancha with Romeo.” (2, 3 6) Friar is telling Juliet how to get out of marrying Paris. She wouldn’t have to do this if Friar Lawrence had just said no to this in the first place. Friar sends a letter to Romeo to tell him of the plan, but he doesn’t get the letter so he believes that Juliet is dead. Romeo then goes to an apothecary to get a poison that will kill him so he can be with Juliet. Poison has brought him to an immediate end. He killed himself to be with her, so she picked up his dagger and drove it though…
The story of Romeo and Juliet is one that will live on forever. Two lovers who took their own lives while overwhelmed by a love they couldn’t understand. Many question who was involved in getting the two to the point where they felt suicide was the only option. Friar Lawrence played a big role in the lives of Romeo and Juliet as did Nurse, and Lord and Lady Capulet. The question being answered here is how did they contribute to such tragedy.…
In the middle of the play Romeo goes to Friar Lawrence and ask for his blessing to marry Juliet. Then Friar Lawrence hastily made the decision to marry them. Friar Lawrence said “for this alliance may so happy prove to turn [their] households' rancor to pure love,” which is the reason why friar Lawrence makes the decision to marry both of them. (II.iii.91-92). After this Romeo and Juliet got secretly married and also planned to do a bedding at night, but that couldn’t happen because Tybalt and Mercutio were fighting. Then Romeo interfered which lead to an opening to Mercutio being stabbed, then Romeo…
Lessons of Young LoveFriar Lawrence is guilty for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet because he is irresponsible, cowardly and thoughtless. First of all, Friar Laurence agrees to marry Romeo and Juliet. “For By your leave, you shall not stay alone till holy church incorporate two in one” (6.6 .36 - 37). This proves Friar Lawrence is guilty of marrying them and this leads to their deaths. This proves Friar Lawrence is guilty of marrying Them which leaves them to their deaths, in the end, it is irresponsible of the friar to agree to marry them because Romeo and Juliet have only known each other for a few days. The friar is an adult who should know better. Their families are enemies. The friar also knows that Juliet is a Capulet and Romeo is a Montague…
When Juliet is upset over Romeo’s banishment, Friar Lawrence tells her, “If, rather than to marry County Paris, / thou hast the strength of will to slay thyself, / Then is it likely thou wilt undertake / A thing like death to chide away this shame” (4.1.73-76). Juliet is very upset when she hears of Romeo’s banishment and her impending marriage to Paris, so she goes to Friar Lawrence for advice on how to solve the problem. Friar Lawrence sees she is desperate, and he gives her an equally desperate solution to her problem. When Friar Lawrence hears of this engagement, all he wants to do is save his own reputation from getting into trouble for marrying these two children. In attempting to save himself, Friar Lawrence makes a decision that creates infinitely more problems for Romeo and Juliet. When Friar Lawrence sees terrified young Juliet, he takes advantage of her weak emotional state to force her into risky plan that will benefit himself. There were easier ways of helping distraught Juliet, but Friar Lawrence chooses the most outlandish and dangerous one that ended in carnage for a lot of…
Sometimes people do things without thinking then regret their decisions later. In addition to that, people might not even consider all their options before making a big decision. In the case of Romeo and Juliet, Friar Lawrence does both of these things. Friar Lawrence is most responsible for these star crossed lovers deaths for many reasons. Some reasons are he tends to do things for the wrong reasons, he doesn’t think things through, and is quite forgetful.…
In this morning, the city of Verona wakes up with the saddest true love story ever known. In the Capulets´ grave, Juliet lays dead beside her love one, Romeo. However, he is not the only one, Paris, murdered by Romeo lays there too.…
Tragedies happen all the time in the world, books, and even plays. But these bad things always happen to everyone; there is no such thing as a perfect life. In the magnificent play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, the tragic death of these two star-crossed lovers, Romeo and Juliet, takes place at the end of the play. Although there are many people to blame for their deaths, one person can for sure be blamed for this. Friar Lawrence is the character most responsible for the two star-crossed lovers deaths at the end of the play. For one thing, he never made sure that the letter got sent to Romeo, and that he kept their marriage a secret to the two families.…
Before any tragic incidents actually occur in the play, Friar Lawrence sets the entire series of unfortunate events into motion by secretly marrying Romeo and Juliet. When Romeo first arrives at the Friar’s cell to declare the love he now feels for Juliet, Friar Lawrence immediately notes how foolish Romeo is being, for just the day before he had been so in love with Rosaline and devastated that she did not return that love. Friar Lawrence says, “Is Rosaline, that thou didst love so dear, / So soon forsaken? ... And art thou chang’d? Pronounce this sentence then: / Women may fall, when there’s no strength in men” (2.3.66-80). Friar Lawrence right away states that it is ridiculous that Rosaline, with whom Romeo was borderline obsessed, has already been replaced with a girl in a matter of days. However, Friar Lawrence then blatantly turns around and contradicts what he says about Romeo behaving foolishly, by agreeing to marry Romeo and Juliet. Friar Lawrence agrees saying, “In one respect I’ll thy assistant be. / For this alliance may…
bed for the night. Juliet asks Romeo if he is leaving since it’s still a long…
First of all, this choice is selfless on his part because he is willing to lose respect in order to end the feud, but this choice was also not a wise choice. By letting the two marry, he is also putting the children in bad positions because his plan for the families’ feud to end may not work, thus threatening the relationship between Romeo and his parents, Juliet and her parents, and the families’ hatred to one another all together. Eventually, complications in his plans occur, such as Romeo’s banishment, and Juliet’s engagement to Paris. So, Friar Lawrence ends up concentrating on Romeo and Juliet’s love and discarding the thought of ending the feud. He opens many windows and creates many opportunities for the couple so that they can be together; this outlines his role in the play. Friar Lawrence provides methods for Romeo and Juliet to reunite, by giving Juliet an elixir to fake her death, and attempting to get Romeo (whom he sent to Mantua) to meet her in her tomb where she would awaken, and hence they would live “happily ever after”. Although Friar Lawrence had good intentions, the results of those actions were very unfortunate, and ended up taking the lives from who he initially tried to…