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…
When Romeo’s friend Mercutio is killed by Juliet’s cousin Tybalt, Romeo kills Tybalt and is forced to flee. Meanwhile, Lord Capulet decides that Juliet will marry her cousin Count Paris, which prompts Friar Lawrence to give Juliet a sleeping potion to produce in her the effects of death. He then sends a message to Romeo telling him of this ruse, but his message fails to arrive. Juliet is presumed dead and her body is taken to the family vault, where Romeo finds her. Overcome with emotion, he commits suicide next to her; she wakes, finds his body next to her and kills herself with his dagger. This double tragedy brings their rival families together in joint grief.…
William Shakespeare’s play Romeo and Juliet is a tragedy about two characters from feuding families who are brought together by fate. Romeo, a Montague, falls in love with Juliet, a Capulet, even though she is to be married to Count Paris, kinsman to Prince Escalus. Romeo and Juliet’s parents would not have approved their marriage. In secrecy, Friar Lawrence marries Romeo and Juliet, lies to Juliet’s parents about the situation, and creates a crazy plan to fake Juliet’s death, which does not turn out as intended. Friar Lawrence’s involvement in the marriage of Romeo and Juliet, his lying to the Capulets, and his role in the false death of Juliet are all factors that prove he is to blame in their untimely deaths.…
The city of Verona has been stage to the desperate end of their true love story. Last night, with friar Lawrence´s help, Juliet fake her death by taking some pills; yet Romeo had been banished from Verona, and Friar Lawrence´s sent, Friar John could not handover the message of their plan.…
Through careful analysis of Shakespeare's language, characterisation and dramatic technique,discuss the nature and development of Romeo and Juliet's relationship.…
Due to Tybalt’s death Lord and Lady Capulet wanted to make Juliet happy again so they made arrangements for Paris and Juliet to get married which caused a problem because Juliet was married to Romeo. Juliet was so conflicted on what to do so she talked to her Nurse and decided to speak with Friar Lawrence. Friar Lawrence says to her "I do spy a kind of hope, Which craves as desperate an execution, As that is desperate which we would prevent. If, rather than to marry County Paris.” Friar Lawrence comes up with a crazy way on how Juliet can fake her own death. He tells her that if she really would do anything rather than marry him then he will give her a special potion that will kill her for forty-two hours but he cannot guarantee that it will work 100%. Being a priest he offers Juliet the option of suicide if she truly does not want to marry…
Romeo and Juliet is hailed as a staple of romantic literature, with beautiful prose and loving relationships. However, while its language is eloquent, Romeo and Juliet’s relation is the antithesis of a good relationship. Any relationship which involves both parties ending up dead within a few days of meeting each other is probably not healthy. It’s clear both of them rushed into it based on superficial reasons and stupidity ended it early.…
For the Friar's plan to be carried out exactly how he wanted them to, he will make sure everything goes as planned, which again is selfish. Before Juliet goes home to drink the vial, the Friar states, "Hold, then; go home, be merry, give consent to marry Paris: Wednesday is tomorrow: Tomorrow night look that thou lie alone; Let not thy nurse lie with thee in thy chamber" (IV.I.89-92). Here Friar Lawrence is demanding Juliet to do exactly what he says in order for his plan to work. He knows that Juliet will do whatever he tells her to do. He is being extremley minipulitave with the circumstances and only thinking about himself. The Friar is not just willing to put Romeo and Juliet under bad circumstance for his own sake, but wholes families under bad circumstances. Shakespeare used the Friars commanding attitude to show an aspect to Friar Lawrences selfishness. During the Friar's explanation of Juliets procedure to drink the potion, he says, "Take thou this vial, being then in bed, and this distilling liquor drink thou off; when presently through all thy veins hall run a cold and drowsy humor; for no pulse shall keep this native progress, but surcease" (IV.I.95-98). The Friar is literaly telling Juliet to drink a potion to make her seem lifless so her family will think she is dead. Just so she and Romeo can run away together, since he is now banished. Completley aware that the Capulets will be devastated. Shakespeare wrote…
The Friar’s plan to get Juliet out of her marriage to Paris, is unnecessarily complicated, and this caused the miscommunications and deaths. After his plan fails, Friar…
Prior to proposing the eight-step plan to Juliet, Friar Lawrence feels a sense of obligation in protecting her. Even though he cannot yet see the dangers of his seemingly foolproof idea, he is trying to keep her from killing herself. While his decisions to help Romeo and Juliet have extreme consequences, he cannot see them because of his motives. Towards the end of the play, as the two families are discussing what could have led to the deaths of their children, Friar Lawrence expresses his stance on the topic, claiming, “To rid her from this second marriage,/Or in [his] cell there would she kill herself” (5.3 250-251). When Friar Lawrence claims, “in my cell there would she kill herself,” he says that he had to step in and make a plan with Juliet in order to keep her from causing herself any harm. Additionally, he cannot see the consequences of his actions due to the fact that he is stuck in the present time. At the moment, the most important thing on his mind is saving Juliet. As seen earlier in the play, Friar Lawrence knows that Juliet is suicidal, and creates a “foolproof” plan in order to save her from…
Marrying the two lovers, possibly for his own agenda, creates a problem that eventually turns fatal. When analyzing the words of Shakespeare a conclusion can be drawn that Friar Lawrence married the two for his own ego, hoping to bring an end to the Capulet-Montague feud. The second strike is the failed plan of talking to the prince about Romeo’s banishment. Before the wedding between Paris and Juliet, Friar plans to convince the prince to remove the banishment and have Romeo return to Verona. With this outcome, the lives of many may have been pardoned. He never gets around to it though, and the wedding plans proceed. The final strike is trusting in another man to deliver an important message which was promised a delivery. Friar places his trust in Friar John, who fails to deliver the plan to Romeo due to a sickness. As Romeo does not receive word of the plan (Juliet will fake her death and Romeo will come and the two will run away) he believes his love is actually dead. As Romeo rushes to the tomb, the Friar does as well, only arriving a moment too late to find a weeping Juliet, a murdered Paris, and a poisoned Romeo. His incompetence and sheer unwillingness to think about the consequences of his actions, are equally to blame for the young lives lost as the poison and…
Context has been a major faction contributing to the way Romeo and Juliet was written. In William Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, Baz Luhrmann produced a Romeo and Juliet with a modern context rather than an Elizabethan context. Context has influenced the language and representation of ideas throughout Romeo and Juliet, notably with the themes: Loyalty Vs. Disloyalty, Power and inequality. These themes have changed the way Romeo and Juliet was written and put them into a different context.…
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.…
Romeo and Juliet is a story about two lovers, and the forces that keep them from that love. In the story, Friar acts as a reoccurring figure for advice to the two lovers, however, his advice and actions did not prove worthy. Friar married the two lovers, gave Juliet the sleeping potion that lead to her, Paris, and Romeo's death, and despite faking her death with the sleeping potion he waited until the final day of the potions lifespan to inform Romeo; because of his late delivery, the letter never reached Romeo. Friar married Romeo and Juliet which made them fall into a deeper love than before, affecting how both acted towards others. This change is seen easily by how Romeo responds to Tybalt in Act III, Scene I, as Romeo states that his love for Juliet made him effeminate, and because of Romeo's attitude Tybalt fights Mercutio alone and Mercutio dies.…