In the play, Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare, there are many life changing events that that Romeo and Juliet must face. One character seen guiding them in most of these scenes is Friar Laurence. He is a very important character that helps many other characters out with their problems. Even though he is a Friar, his main role in the play is acting as a mentor for Romeo and Juliet. He is favored by all the other characters as a holy man. He is also well liked by the audience because secretly helps Romeo and Juliet when their parents won’t even pay attention to them.…
Friar Laurence is responsible for Romeo and Juliet’s death because he agreed to marry them in secret. “In one respect I’ll thy assistant be; For this alliance may so happy prove To turn your households’ rancor to pure love” (II.I. 90). If he had not agreed to that, their outcome could have been different. Juliet would not have had to drink the poison and Romeo would not have had killed himself after seeing what he thought was Juliet’s lifeless body. “For this alliance may so happy prove to turn your households’ rancor to pure love.” Friar Laurence wants to marry Romeo and Juliet for his own personal gain to end the fued…
At the end of the play Friar Laurence found Juliet in the tomb standing next to the dead bodies of Romeo and Paris. He needed to convince her to leave Romeo behind. At this time Friar Laurence tells Juliet, “Come, I’ll dispose of thee among a sisterhood of holy nuns/ Stay not to question for the watch is coming. Come, go, good Juliet. I dare no longer stay”(V.iii.168-171). In this quote Friar Laurence told Juliet to come with him and he would cast her among a sisterhood of nuns. I think this showed his motivation due to trying to dispose Juliet so he could not be associated with Romeo and Paris’s deaths. During this scene I also took note that Friar Laurence most likely new Juliet would take her life if he left her, but again his reputation and image trumped saving Juliet’s life. Furthermore, Lord Capulet also put his reputation over the happiness and fate of Juliet, Romeo, and Paris, causing great obliteration of them. I found my next quote when Lord Capulet had talked to Juliet about her marriage to Paris. During this scene Lord Capulet told Juliet, “Hang thee young baggage! Disobedient Wretch!/ I tell thee what, get thee to church o’thursday,/ Or never look me in the face” (III.V.160-162). In this quote Lord Capulet demonstrated his power over Juliet by saying if she does not comply with his wishes she will be…
Friar Laurence plays a large part in the downfall of Romeo and Juliet. He is extremely secretive with Romeo and Juliet’s relationship, he does not communicate well, and is an overall coward. Friar Laurence makes the ill-advised decision to marry Romeo and Juliet instead of denying to marry them and telling their parents. He believes that their relationship is better kept a secret. In fact, the Friar reveals how uneasy he feels about the union, but goes through with it anyway because of these deep beliefs: “O she knew well Thy love did read by rote, that could not spell. But come, young waverer, come go with me, In one respect I’ll…
After the Friar found out that both Romeo and Paris had died. He went to check on Juliet who was depressed because of the sight she was seeing. The Friar tried to persuade Juliet into coming with him to the sisterhood of holy nuns. Instead he ran away because someone was coming near Juliet’s tomb, to which caused the death of Juliet: “Come, come away. Thy husband in thy bosom there lies dead, And paris too. Come, I’ll dispose of thee, Among a sisterhood of holy. Stay not to question, for the watch is coming. Come, go, good Juliet, I dare no longer stay.” ( 5.3 166 - 171 ) and “ go, get out of here, I’m not going anywhere, ( Exit Friar Lawrence ).” ( 5.3 172 ) The quotes that were added were involved in the topic, because it shows that the Friar was too afraid and ran off without knowing the choices that he had just made. It also shows that the Friar made the error of leaving Juliet alone with Romeo’s dagger in her tomb: “O happy dagger, This is thy sheath. There rust and let me die. (stabs herself with ROMEO’s dagger and dies)” ( 5.3 182 - 184 ) as well as being too eager to leave. If he just use brute force or give her that charm then maybe she would have went with him and that the death of another child would have not…
In act 2, scene 6, line 35-37, it says,”Friar Laurence. Come, come with me, and we will make short work; For, by your leaves, you shall not stay alone till Holy Church incorporate two in one.” This shows that Friar Laurence was to blame for Romeo and Juliet’s death. Instead of telling them the way it should have been, like how their families are enemies for a reason. He should have told them the cold hard truth, that they shouldn’t do whatever it took for each other, they should do whatever it took for their parents. As in not be with each other. But with everyone else, he was…
“What, drawn, and talk of peace! I hate the word, as I hate hell, all Montagues, and thee…” In William Shakespeare’s play, Romeo and Juliet, a story about two feuding families and the main couples of the families children fall in love each other, and then they die tragic deaths because they fell like they can’t be together. There are characters that show that Tybalt was the spark through their words and actions, and they include Romeo, Juliet, and Tybalt himself. Ultimately, Tybalt was the spark the flames of the families feud.…
Friar Laurence gives Juliet hope of seeing him again by giving her a sleeping potion, and promises that she will awaken with Romeo by her side. He is trying to help her back to her love. But in a turn of unfortunate events, Friar Laurence’s letter to Romeo about his lady’s ‘passing’ didn’t get received, but the news did. Romeo came back with death on his mind, and in the end they both met their tragic fates. Friar Laurence did not want any of this to happen, but him giving Juliet the potion further thickens the plot by adding a final climax to the epic love story. He unintentionally killed the two he spent countless hours trying to protect. Closing the play with an ironic, twist…
Almost everything the Friar does is to make his plan succeed, the plan is for people to see him the best friar in Verona. After Romeo requsests the Friar to wed the two, the Friar says, “In one respect I’ll thy assistance be, for this alliance may be so happy prove to turn your household rancor to pure love” (II.III.97-99). This evidence is showing that the Friar is willing to put Romeo and Juliet’s lives at stake. Shakespeare had the Friar potray a perfect example of selfishness by having him give Romeo his word to wed the two behind everyone’s back. Shakespeare did this to show that the Friar makes decisions for his own good, to make it seem as if the Friar is such a peacemaker. This instant could have very well been the ticket to Romeo and Juliet’s death. If that doesn't show how desperatley selfish the Friar is. Later in the story the Friar says, "Come, I'll dispose of thee among a sisterhood of holy nuns" (V.III.156-157). This explicit evidence shows that the reason the Friar suggested this to Juliet was because he gave Juliet the poisin and he is the reason Romeo and Paris are dead. So the Friar figured this would be a way for him to not get in trouble for all his wrong doings, which is extremely selfish. If he was caught, he would look very bad. Shakespeare showed how important the Friar's personal image is for him, by…
Friar was extremely well known for thinking of things off the top of his head. His plan was to fake Juliet’s death, so Romeo and Juliet can leave happily ever after. What he states is that he will send a letter to Romeo so he is aware on the plan and get them to escape together. This leads to the couples due to the fact that…. Romeo never received the letter, thus leads to Romeo thinking she is dead, which made him kill himself. If he planned it out, maybe Romeo would have found and agreed with the plan. Another reason is Friar marrying the couple way too quickly. After Romeo meet Juliet about a day ago, he goes to Friar to get them married. However Friar states that he didn’t really love her, he just is quickly in love. If Friar didn’t marry them quickly, maybe the families would understand that they are extremely dedicated to each other, ending the feud. Also, Friar just did all this just to end the feud. If he thought twice about the decision, maybe they wouldn’t lead up to the events that killed them. That is the final trait that killed…
In William Shakespeare’s play Romeo and Juliet, Juliet is one of the only characters who takes time to think over her decisions. In addition to this, she sticks to the choices she makes despite anyone else’s input. This is shown through Juliet’s thoughts when her mother speaks ill of her one true love, Romeo. When her mother regards Romeo as a “villain” for murdering Juliet’s cousin, Juliet says “Villain and he be many miles asunder. - God pardon him! I do, with all my heart” (3.5.85-86). In this quote, Juliet is expressing how she forgives Romeo for what he had done and that she does not think of him as a villain. Her saying this shows her fidelity and devotion to Romeo. Her lover for him is so strong that she is willing to forgive him for…
The Friar was the root of Romeo and Juliet’s death. The Friar thought he could just make an ill-advised decision of marrying the two young children without their parents consent: ‘“this alliance may so happy prove’” he thought it would make their families reunite but in reality it was a very dimwitted choice (Shakespeare 2.4.91). Now even though he made this one wrong decision does not make him accountable for Romeo and Juliet’s death but the problem is that, that was not the only careless mistake he made: “’like death…cheeks shall fade …”’ he gave Juliet a potion that would make her appear dead. This potion made her seem dead to everyone that saw her including Romeo who already had an overwhelming dose of emotional stress which caused him to commit suicide. Even though it seems like the Friar might have been innocent towards this whole situation, he played a big part in the death of Romeo and…
Elizabeth Gilbert, an author once stated "Your emotions are the slaves to your thoughts, and you are the slave to your emotions. Elizabeth Gilbert. This quote speaks a message about life, how a person’s emotions have complete control of your actions and vice versa. Most people continue to wonder why these emotions happen in the first place and how simple emotions may lead to huge decision making. In the tragedy “Romeo and Juliet” by William Shakespeare, it explains the journey of two star-crossed lovers and their difficulties that are created by strong emotions, such as their passion and desperation.…
However, it seems that Friar is unable to distinguish if the Romeo and Juliet's situation is safe and in control. News Flash, This situation is clearly out of control. “Juliet Tell me not, friar, that thou hear’st of this, Unless thou tell me how I may prevent it: If, in thy wisdom, thou canst give no help, Do thou but call my resolution wise, And with this knife I’ll help it presently” (Shakespeare, 617). The quote proves that Juliet is suicidal, so this is clearly out of Laurence's control, any situation with suicidal thoughts is a delicate situation that must be taking care with extreme precision, which includes many people. So why doesn’t Friar Laurence obtain some help? He could explain this to death Romeo and Juliet's parents and have them hopefully understand their deep love. However, both families are so controlled by their anger that they can’t think straight. So a better idea would be to speak with the Prince. The Prince seems one of the few characters who seem to be sane, so the Prince will surely understand the love between the two teens and explain this to their parents. All Friar Laurence would need to do is to set up time to talk with the Prince. The prince will surely listen to the Friar. Problem…
Friar laurence also made immature choices as well. He agreed to marry the two and also made a plan that in the end killed them. “ Take thou this vial, being then in bed and this distilled liquor drink thou off” (pg. 255). Here the friar tells Juliet to drink a poison that won’t kill her but make her sleep for two days. He does this so she can fake her death and be with Romeo. The Friar also made the decision to marry Romeo and Juliet in the beginning of the play. “ I’ll thy assistant be; for this alliance may so happy prove to turn your households rancer to pure love” (pg. 217). This is where things started going bad for the two. The friar could have denied Romeo when he asked for him to marry…