Minister Laurence, through his absence of practical insight, is to a great extent in charge of the passings of both …show more content…
Romeo and Juliet. As opposed to being steady of them and helping them uncover their adoring circumstance, Friar Laurence took the "simple" way out. He capitulated to their yearning to steal away. He furtively wedded Romeo and Juliet as opposed to remaining behind them and urging them to go up against their families with the realities about their dedication to and cherish for each other. Subsequently, a considerably more grounded security between them was made through marriage: "For, by your abandons, you might not remain alone/Till heavenly church fuse two in one" (2.6.36-37). Monk Lawrence wedded Romeo and Juliet, trusting that their union would convey a conclusion to the steady fighting between their two families, the Montagues and the Capulets. Despite the fact that the minister's aims were great or more censure, they were absolutely slips along a pathway to catastrophe. None of the tragedies would have happened if Romeo and Juliet were not hitched. At the point when Tybalt tested Romeo to a battle, Romeo, now being identified with Tybalt through marriage, declined to battle, saying, "Tybalt, the reason that I need to love thee/Doth much reason the applying rage/To such a welcome - " (3.1.61-63). At the point when Mercutio ventured into safeguard Romeo's respect, Romeo attempted to stop the battling. It was his obstruction that prompted Mercutio's passing. "Why the fiend came you between us? I was harmed under/your arm"(3.1.102-103). Presently, in a fury that would bring about his expulsion, Romeo lashed out at Tybalt and killed him saying, "- - Tybalt, that a hour/Hath been my cousin. O sweet Juliet! /Thy magnificence has made me womanly,/And in my temper soften'd valor's steel"(3.1.112-115)! Romeo and Juliet's marriage has brought on Mercutio and Tybalt's passings, and Romeo's expulsion. Minister Laurence was the instigator of all these woeful occasions; he began the tragedies by wedding Romeo and Juliet.
Indeed, even after Mercutio's passing and Romeo's expulsion, Friar Laurence did not see the ruinous tendency of Romeo and Juliet's marriage.
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
to you that odds have" (3.3.168-170), Balthasar could have conveyed the letter to Romeo. Be that as it may, on account of Friar Laurence's limitation and absence of an alternate course of action, he destined those he attempted to offer assistance.