Friar Lawrence In Shakespeare's Romeo And Juliet

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“These violent delights have violent ends / And in their triump die, like fire and powder / Which, as they kiss, consume” (William 2 . 6 . 10). Friar Lawrence says this in the play which foreshadows Romeo and Juliet's love for one another and how it ends so quickly. In this tragedy of two feuding houses, the Montagues and the Capulets, their children, Romeo and Juliet fall in love in the midst of their feuding. The star-crossed lovers go through many tragic events which lead to their own deaths. Romeo and Juliet secretly get married from the Friar Lawrence and end up dying for one another. In the play, Romeo and Juliet, by William Shakespeare, Friar Lawrence is the most to blame for the deaths of Romeo and Juliet because he was the one to secretly marry them, he abandoned Juliet at the Capulet tomb, and from his …show more content…

Friar Lawrence thought that is would be a brilliant idea to marry the two in secret so the Capulets and the Montagues would finally stop their feuding. “But 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 households’ rancor to pure love” (2 . 3 . 96-99). Friar Lawrence doesn’t believe that Romeo’s love for Juliet is real since he just thought that he loved another lady named Rosaline but he still agrees to marry them anyway. The Friar tells Romeo and Juliet that he will marry the two of them in his cell. “Here comes the lady. O, so light a foot / Will ne'er wear out the everlasting flint. A lover may bestride the gossamers / That idles in the wanton summer air, / And yet not fall, so light is vanity” (2 . 6 . 16-20). Juliet runs into Friar Lawrence's cell so the Friar can marry the two of them. Friar Lawrence is the most to blame for Romeo and Juliet’s death because he married them in secret which causes a lot of tragic events to happen and the Friar leaves Juliet at her family’s

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