Elizabeth Martinez Stephanie Nichols 4/6/13 ELA9B Who’s The Blame? In the play The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, two starcrossed lovers fall in love at first sight not knowing that they are suppose to hate each other. Soon they find out that their only love comes from their only hate, but they don’t care. Romeo takes Juliet’s hand in marriage. Soon after Romeo takes a life and is banned from Verona. He goes back thinking Juliet is dead and takes his life. Juliet wakes up to him taking the poison and takes her life too. Think before you do! Friar Lawrence is responsible for Romeo and Juliet’s death. He should have thought things through. Like what would have happened if Romeo didn’t get the letter and how the families would feel. But his thought was honorable.…
Romeo and Juliet essay In The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet written by William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet fall in love.Then they plan a secret marriage because of their families’ relationship, the Capulets and the Montagues always fighting in the streets of Verona the city of Italy. They are married by Friar Lawrence, the priest of Verona. Then there is a fight between Tybalt from the Capulets and Mercutio the cousins prince, then Romeo from the Montagues enters and interferes the fight and then Tybalt stabs Mercutio and dies. Then after this happens more and more deaths begin to follow including Romeo and Juliet . This terrible tragedy has only one person to blame and that is Friar Lawrence!…
Even though the Friar isn’t the only person to blame for Romeo and Juliet’s death, he plays a huge role and is partly to blame for everything that happens. The Friar agrees to marry Romeo and Juliet when they’ve only known each other for less than a day. He agrees to this because he thinks that it would end the feud between the two families that has been going on for years. As he says to Romeo “come, young waverer, come, go with me/In one respect I’ll thy assistant be/For this alliance may so happy prove/To turn your household’s rancor to pure love” (R+J3.2. 89-92). When Romeo gets sent away for killing Tybalt, Friar Laurence comes up with a plan to have Romeo and Juliet be together so he gets Friar John to deliver a message to Romeo. Little did Friar John know that that letter meant life or death. As Friar Laurence says “Unhappy fortune! By my brotherhood/ The letter was not nice but full of charge/ Of dear import, and the neglecting it/May do much danger” (R+J 5.2. 17-20). The second part of the Friars plan is…
I think that Friar Laurence is to blame because he marries them even though he knows that something bad could still happen, “Uneven is the course I like it not.” He marries them not because he knows that they are in love but because he thinks that the marriage is going to end the feud between both families. Also Friar Laurence is the only character that really knows what is going on throughout the play. When he gives the potion to Juliet and then sends the letter to Romeo the letter doesn't arrive in time. If the Friar had thought through the plan longer it might have worked, but he went to fast and doesn't think about what might go wrong. In the old version when Juliet wakes up and the Friar tells her to run away with him and she refuses him selfishly runs away because he fears that he might get in trouble. If he had stayed with Juliet he could have stopped her from stabbing herself.…
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…
First, Friar was the only one to know about the relationship which could cause an enigma. Therefor he puts Romeo and Juliet at risk of the families finding out and getting into a bigger feud. Then, Friar also makes the decision to marry Romeo and Juliet with no one’s consent but their own. “The sweetest honey is the loathsome in his own deliciousness, and in the taste confounds the appetite. Therefor love moderately” (Shakespeare 1040). This shows that they both have tasteful love and sweet care for each other. But they do not have a plan…
Friar is responsible for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet by wedding them. If Friar would not have married them. “I’ll tell thee as we pass; but this I pray that thou consent to marry us to-day” (44). This quote means that Romeo asks if he can marry him and Juliet. “For this alliance may so happy prove to turn your households’ rancor to pure love” (45). Friar is agreeing to marry Romeo and Juliet because Friar thinks that if they marry, the households will reach peace and not fight. Romeo and Juliet lives were lost because of Friar.…
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…
Therefore, Friar didn’t live up to the expectations of his job and that’s what triggered the tragedy of Romeo and Juliet to occur. Their death would off been prevented if this ridiculous and outrageous plan was never conjured up by the Friar. Hidden lies, ruined these young children’s lives. Friar should’ve known the consequences of his actions and that’s why he is at fault. Thanks to Friar they’re family is grieving over their losses. Romeo and Juliet were young, and thanks to Friar they never got too see much of their love awake…
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…
Friar’s tragic flaw is directly responsible for Romeo’s and Juliet’s decision, and impacts the play’s tragedy. One of Friar’s flaw is a fixed perception that the only way to bring peace between the two families is to secretly marry Romeo and Juliet without parental approval. When the situation did not progress as planned, Friar’s superiority and stubbornness cause him to fail to realize that he should advise them to change their approach towards the situation. Not only did Friar not realizes his mistake, he still is convinced that Romeo and Juliet should escape and live their own lives. Friar failed to see the possibility that both families’ could reconcile and give the couple their blessings. Instead ironically, being a priest, Friar’s continued…
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…
Juliet made the same decisions as Romeo did. She did 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…
Blame the Friar The Friar is to blame for all of the drama and deaths that went on in Romeo and Juliet. If the Friar wouldn't have married Romeo and Juliet then none of the drama would have began. The Friar shouldn't have given the potion to Juliet, and he shouldn't have lied to the Capulets about why Juliet wouldn't marry Paris. The Friar also shouldn't have gone along with new plans without informing Romeo on what his part was first.…
In the play “Romeo and Juliet” written by William Shakespeare I blame the reason for their tragedy on Friar Laurence. In the play the Friar married Romeo and Juliet to each other and didn’t inform the Capulet's nor the Montague's. The Friar also tried to help Juliet by giving her a sleeping potion so she wouldn’t have to marry Paris. He also failed to deliver the letter to Romeo saying that Romeo didn’t die, but she was in fact sleeping. “I could not send it here it is again nor get a messenger to bring it thee so fearful were they of infection” (Shakespeare 470). Lastly the Friar had blamed the two lover's death of Romeo and Juliet when both the Capulet's and Montague's had heard of there passings.…