Who is responsible for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet? There are several people who could be blame for the deaths of these to young persons which are Romeo and Juliet. One of them that could be blame is there parents or Tybalt and Mercutio or even the nurse or other people.But the one that is mostly blame since the beginning is the Friar Laurence for all the things he did for Romeo and Juliet.…
Friar Lawrence is a priest of Verona. He is the person that married Romeo and juliet. When Juliet tells him that she would rather die than to marry Paris, that had an impact on him so he came up with a plan that was dangerous but if she's desperate enough then she will do it. His plan was for juliet to drink the potion which made her seem dead for two days, when she drinks the potion she is taken to her tomb. When Juliet is seen dead by Balthasar that led to him telling Romeo that she is dead. When Romeo goes to her tomb and sees her “dead” he gets depressed and doesn't want to live without her, this resulted in Romeo killing himself by drinking poison. When Friar Lawrence sees Juliet awake he tries to take her out of the tomb without her seeing…
This Song relates to Romeo and Juliet , after Romeo killed Tybalt, who was Juliet's cousin. The reason he killed him , because Tybalt killed Mercutio, who was Romeo’s best friend. After Tybalt was killed the prince came and people told on Romeo. Romeo then went to Friar Lawrence house on some advice on what he just did. Then the nurse came and told Romeo that he wife was in a suicidal mind “Oh, she says nothing,sir;just weeps and weeps.” The song is relating to someone trying to get to their and that , that person is taking their breath away. Meaning that person is trying so hard for them that it’s taking their breath away.…
Throughout the play the Friar goal was to unite the two families and end their feud. The Friar thought if he published showed the relationship between Romeo and Juliet then the two families would accept each other and end their feud but instead the Friar decided to keep the marriage a secret and for that matters went with the complicated way of things. "Holy Saint Francis, what a change is here!" (2.3.65). After getting over his shock of the news, the Friar agrees to marry the two because he believes the marriage will end the feud between the Montague's and the Capulet's. He says, "In one respect I'll thy assistant be,/For this alliance may so happy prove/To turn your households' rancor to pure love" (2.3.97-90). He announced that the marriage…
Romeo and Juliet is a story written by William Shakespeare of a romantic tragedy that happened between Romeo and Juliet. The story teaches us to think intensively before we do something that can impact our lives so greatly. The story also teaches us how love can affect the decisions that we make rapidly. As a secondary character, Friar Lawrence was a mentor to Romeo; he taught him new things and helped to light a path that would make his future sophisticated. At the end of the story, Friar Lawrence made an impact on the tragedy that occurred where Juliet and Romeo die for their love for each other. Without Friar Lawrence in the story, the end tragedy may have not happened; furthermore Romeo and Juliet may not have been together…
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.…
Rather he kept on endeavoring to keep Romeo and Juliet together. The arrangement he prepared for this, be that as it may, was childish, half-baked, and unsafe. Monk Laurence formulated the arrangement in flurry and in franticness on the grounds that Juliet was there in the minister's nearness undermining suicide as opposed to wed Paris. "Unless thou disclose to me how I may anticipate it. /If, in thy shrewdness thou canst give no help,/Do however call my determination savvy,/And with this blade I'll help it by and by" (4.1.51-54). To conciliate Juliet, Friar Laurence gave her an elixir to expend that would empower her to pretend passing, along these lines turning away marriage to Paris. He, in the interim would send a note to Romeo educating him of the deception that was being executed on the Capulets and Paris, and requesting that Romeo meet him at the cemetery where Juliet would welcome them fit as a fiddle. Sadly, the message never arrived. This was uncovered when Friar John told Friar Laurence, " I couldn't send it, here it is again/Nor get an errand person to bring it thee" (5.2.14-15). Monk Laurence clearly had not told the delivery person the significance of the letter achieving Romeo. What's more, if Friar Laurence had taken after the first assention he made with Romeo: "Visit in Mantua; I'll discover your man,/Every great hap…
I believe that Friar Laurence is to blame for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet. Friar Laurence was the one that gave Juliet the potion that made her appear dead, therefore misleading Romeo and causing him to kill himself. Friar Laurence says “Take thou this vial, being then in bed, And this distilled liquor drink thou off; When presently through all thy veins shall run A cold and drowsy humor; no pulse, no warmth, no breath.” When Friar Laurence was figuring out this plan he could had come up with something safer or a backup plan just in case something went wrong. He also should had thought of the pros and cons of this plan before he went through with it because he was faced with a huge problem when the plan could not get through to Romeo and…
Juliet then makes a decision and that is “If that thy bent of love be honorable, thy purpose marriage, send me word tomorrow” She does this to see if Romeo's intentions are honorable. As an audience we react with surprise because of the time they have known each other and the age of the protagonists. With this decision Juliet takes a real control over the…
To explain this further, Romeo was banished due to killing Tybalt. Since Juliet did not want to marry Paris, she and Friar had the idea of getting a potion that would pretend to kill Juliet. “To rid her from this second marriage / or in my cell there she would kill herself” (5.3.241-242). In this quote, Friar explains that he felt he was bound to help her, or she would have ended her life anyway. In the letter to Romeo it indicates what the plan was for the two. The letter meant life-and-death for both Romeo and Juliet. However, Friar did not tell Friar John who was to deliver the letter to him, that it was urgent. The Black Death was a threat, so Friar John did not think it was that big of a deal if he did not get the letter. He explains to Friar Lawrence, “Suspecting that we both were in a house / where the infectious pestilence did reign” (5.2.9-10). If Friar Lawrence told him that the letter was urgent, then Romeo most likely would have gotten it, and Romeo and Juliet would have not died tragically. Friar Lawrence should have come up with a better plan to let Romeo know what was…
Friar lied… He is deceitful… Meddled… That began the awful tragedy of Romeo and Juliet. We can say that Friar seems like an intelligent and reasonable man however have his actions proven that? Friar is guilty because he married Romeo and Juliet in secret, thinking it would resolve the dispute between the two feuding families. He conjures up a ridiculous plan whereby Romeo gets banished from Verona to allow Juliet to meet him in secret. We will explore all of the flaws in this plan and how it affected Romeo and Juliet. What will be examined today are the roles and responsibilities of Friar, his actions and motivations and their direct and indirect consequences.…
bed for the night. Juliet asks Romeo if he is leaving since it’s still a long…
From the onset of the play to its conclusion, Romeo acts without thinking of his consequences. Romeo meets with Juliet after the party and they immediately decide to get married, without reminding themselves that they are enemies. When Romeo departs to the Friar to plead to be married to Juliet, the Friar ridicules Romeo by saying "thy love did read by rote but could not spell." (Rom 2.3.91). The Friar meant Romeo just loves to love, without really knowing how, because you can't write correctly without knowing how to spell. Romeo acts on impulse rather than thought. He knows that the love of his life is his family's enemy and regardless of that fact, he beseeches the Friar to wed him to Juliet. These acts of impulse soon lead to the death of both Romeo and his love…
She had trusted the Friar to help her save her marriage with Romeo and make sure she doesn’t end up marrying Paris. To ensure Juliet from not marrying Paris and to stay united with Romeo, Friar Lawrence had come up with a plan. His plan for Juliet was to “Go home...give consent to marry Paris… take thou this veil, being then in bed, and this distilling liquor drink thou off… I will watch thy waking and that very night shall Romeo bear thee hence to Mantua” (p.750). Friar Lawrence had ensured that there wouldn't be any flaws to this plan. But what had happened was that Romeo didn’t get the letter and came to Juliet’s tomb and had killed himself. After waking up from her coma-like state, Juliet had seen her husband lying dead on the ground. She decided that “[she] will not away...haply some poison yet doth hang on them to make me die with a restorative.... The I’ll be brief. O happy dagger!” (p. 769-770). Juliet had killed herself because she thought that a world without Romeo was equivalent to no world at all. Without Friar Lawrence’s carelessness and ignorance in the plan, Romeo wouldn’t have killed himself and neither would Juliet. He was the cause of their deaths because of the failures in his plans.…