Friar Lawrence knew that the Capulet, and Montague families were enemies, but he went ahead and secretly married Romeo and Juliet. The friar believed if he married them the family's feud would end because of the marriage. Before he married the two he questioned Romeo if he actually loved Juliet, thinking if they loved each other then it was okay to marry them, but the friar knew that it was forbidden to marry two people from the fighting families. Friar Lawrence then questioned Romeo if he actually loved her because just the day before, Romeo loved Rosaline and said if he couldn't be with her he wouldn't be with anyone else. Romeo then fell in love faster than a blink of an eye.…
In addition to Tybalt’s disobedience, Friar Lawrence exhibits his own act of balky to the families when he consents to marry Romeo and Juliet in secret, “...but this I pray, that thou consent to marry us today… In one respect I’ll thy assistant be; for this alliance may so happy prove to turn your households’ rancour to pure love” (2.3.63-94). Friar Lawrence assents to marry Romeo and Juliet in hopes of ending the fight between the families, but in doing so, he is not cooperating…
Friar Lawrence was always supporting and helping out Romeo with everything. Friar Lawrence was the one who planned to secretly marry Romeo and Juliet . He believed that if Romeo and Juliet get married, it would bring the Montagues and Capulets all together and the fighting between them will stop. When Romeo and Juliet got married, things didn’t get better, it got so much worse. Tybalt didn’t want Romeo to be with his cousin…
Friar Lawrence agrees to marry Romeo and Juliet even though there was a strong chance it would lead to terrible consequences. “In one respect I’ll thy assistant be, For this alliance may so happy prove To turn your households’ rancor to pure love” Lawrence says to Romeo.(2.3.90-93). In this quote, he explains why he agrees to marry them. He has the intention of settling the two families feuds by having Romeo and Juliet married.…
Even though Friar Lawrence is the adult in the situation, he leaves Juliet, a child, because he is afraid of getting caught in committing a “sin”. The Friar’s incompetence leads to numerous bad decisions on his part. The most disastrous is the fact that he marries Romeo and Juliet “illegally.” In Act II, Scene VI he states, “you shall not stay alone/…
One afternoon, while in Friar Laurence’s cell, Romeo confesses his love for Juliet and requests that the Friar perform a marriage ceremony between the two lovers that very day while she is already betrothed to another man. It is unexpected that the Friar responds “For this alliance may so happy prove to turn your household’s rancor to pure love,” (Rom. 2.3. 91-92). While the Montagues and Capulets are against their houses associating the Friar believes that the two lover’s relationships will end all of the fighting. Later on in the day, the Nurse sets off to find Romeo on the behalf of Juliet and when she finds Romeo he delivers the news that he requests Juliet’s hand in marriage.…
After Friar Lawrence agrees to marry Romeo and Juliet, he says this just before the scene ended, “Wisely, and Slow. They stumble who run fast (Shakespeare, 2.3.94).” The quote has evidence that Friar is to blame because he is telling Romeo to be careful in his marriage. Marriages are broke for those who rush it and don’t give it time. Friar agrees to marry them anyway even though it might not be a healthy marriage because he was desperate for the reunion of the Capulets and Montagues.…
In Act 2 Scene 6 Romeo and Juliet get married, because of this I’ve chosen the song “Going to The Chapel of Love”. Which is the 1964 boogie-swing hit sung by The Dixie Cups. “Going to The Chapel of Love” is just another way of saying church of love. At the beginning of scene 6 Friar Lawrence says “So smile the heavens upon this holy act / That after-hours with sorrow chide us not. ”(2.6.1-2)…
In addition, another similarity is that they both hang around people and places that they shouldn’t be. The Friar knows the barmaids because he is constantly in the bars (l. 245). This shows the reader that the Friar is not going around to the poor, but instead is in the bars. This means that he does not help the poor, but stays with those who he can get money from.…
On Juliet’s balcony, she says she will marry Romeo, he just needs to send her word on what is happening. Romeo rushes to Friar asking if he would do the honors of marrying himself and Juliet. With convincing, eventually Friar Lawrence agrees to marry them by saying, “... Young waverer, come, go with me, in one respect I’ll thy assistant be” (II.iii.89-90). By agreeing to join the couple in marriage, Friar sets up every bad event that happens to Romeo and Juliet.…
In Act 2 scene 1, Romeo begs the Friar to marry him and Juliet. He finally says yes after saying, “For this alliance may so happy prove, to turn your households’ rancor to pure love.” He is basically saying he thinks the marriage could stop the two families from feuding. Juliet was later forced To marry a man picked by her parents. The day before the wedding she refuses because she is already married.…
When Romeo and Juliet went to Friar Lawrence, Friar Lawrence should have been a adult since he is one and told them no. He could have also told the young lovers why it wasn’t ok to get married and If the teenagers still didn’t listen he could have told they’re parents. The Friar could have also counseled them to wait and not to jump into things and how it was okay to be in love but how they should wait and think everything through. Friar Lawrence wanted the feuding with the Montagues (Romeo family) and the…
Romeo and Juliet Essay ‘A pair of star-cross’d lovers take their live’ (1.0.6) Romeo and Juliet is a true tragedy written by William Shakespeare where both main characters take their lives in the end as an act of love in order to be together, forever. In this play, their deaths are at the fault of Friar Lawrence who, being an adult, a man of God and a trusted person in the community, betrayed that trust and kept a foolish the secret of Romeo and Juliet in hope that it would end the feud between the two families, the Capulets and Montague’s. Not only was Friar Lawrence the man who agreed to bond both Romeo and Juliet in marriage; he was also the brains behind the plan of getting them together after Romeo’s banishment without weighing out the consequences and realizing how destructive their love is throughout it all. Friar Laurence’s interference in the families of Romeo and Juliet set much of the fighting, rage and death of these characters into motion. Friar Lawrence is largely responsible for the deaths of both Romeo and Juliet.…
Romeo’s urgency causes the Friar to question his true feelings, especially after being so depressed from Rosaline refusing to be with him. After witnessing Romeo’s stubbornness, the Friar agrees to marry him, while issuing the warning of, “Wisely and slow. They stumble that run fast”(411). Friar Lawrence enables this doomed marriage to take place, still without revealing their plans to the parents. This is perhaps one of the most devastating mistakes made by any character in the play.…
In Act 2, scene 6, “May the heavens be happy with this holy act of marriage, so nothing unfortunate happens later to make us regret it.” This is saying that Friar Lawrence married Romeo and Juliet…