Friar Lawrence In Shakespeare's Romeo And Juliet

1026 Words3 Pages

Friar Lawrence is guilty
We have all been stricken with a great loss. Romeo Montague and Juliet Capulet have committed double suicide but days ago. This terrible tragedy was due to their forbidden, secret love, the likes of which we knew nothing about until it was too late. We might have known sooner, and none of this may have happened if it wasn't for the actions of Friar Lawrence. His actions led to their premature demise, as he married them for the wrong intentions and did not come clean about the marriage when such information was needed. Although the Friar is a holy man, we cannot forget the terrible things he has done. Allow me to elaborate on his deeds and my reasoning behind why Friar Lawrence should be punished for what he has done. …show more content…

Following Romeo’s banishment, Juliet was so stricken with grief that she did nothing but cry for hours on end. Her father thought this to be a result of Tybalt’s (Juliet’s cousin) murder, the very reason Romeo was exiled. He arranged her a marriage to the county Paris in the hopes that it would cheer her up, but she was already married to Romeo. Outraged over this, she went to the Friar in the hopes that he would provide counsel. Instead of coming clean and telling the Capulets about Juliet’s marriage, he told her “Hold, daughter. I do spy a kind of hope, which craves as desperate an execution as that is desperate which we would prevent.” (Act 4, Scene 1). Friar Lawrence came up with a risky plan, in which Juliet would fake her death and be placed in her family’s tomb. After two days, Juliet would wake up and be escorted out of town by the Friar and Romeo. A plan so risky and unpredictable as this should never have been carried out, and the Friar knew that. Instead of taking the fall and admitting that he married Romeo and Juliet, he opted to save his own hide and risk Juliet’s life. The Friar put his well being before that of Juliet, and over complicated the scenario in an attempt to protect his reputation. An argument can be made that this risky plan was the sole cause of the double suicide, and there is logic to it. If the Friar had not gone through with this plan, and simply told the families of Romeo and Juliet about their love, maybe we wouldn’t be in this awful situation. The plan to fake Juliet’s death was way too risky and should never have happened, yet the Friar chose to go through with it just to spare his reputation. For this and more, he is responsible for the deaths of Romeo and

Open Document