Fate And Fate In The Tragedy Of Romeo And Juliet

661 Words2 Pages

From the beginning of "The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet", the reader knew how the story was going to end, hence the title of the story and the explanations in the start. After reading through the story, there were multiple frustrating moments where events could have gone one way but ended up going in another. Every act in the story added onto the total tragic ending. The things that happened could have been because of fate, but everything had to start somewhere. Everything had to start somewhere. Everything that occurred in the story would not have been possible if it was not for the Friar who had agreed to the marriage.
Romeo and Juliet were very young and very inexperienced when it came to love. The two "lovers" encountered each other and fell in love right away. It was not soon after their meeting did Romeo make haste to the Friar to organize a marriage. The Friar being the elder of the two knew better right away and teased Romeo against it. Romeo in this conversation however, was very persistent. The argument between the two ended with Romeo's wish prevailing. "O, let us hence! I stand on sudden haste." (Shakespeare 805) Romeo had said to the Friar toward the end. Normally, if it was a very important point that needed to be made, the Friar would have kept at it and tried to convince Romeo and tell him what he was doing wrong. However, the Friar did not continue and he seemed to give up his effort. "Wisely and slow. They stumble that run too fast."(Shakespeare 805).The Friar was still able to make a point in that statement but, by the end Romeo would have not listened and would have taken that as a victory. Because this argument did not persuade Romeo to slow down, it was that flaw that the Friar should accept the...

... middle of paper ...

...e story that soon brought us to the anticipated tragic ending. If not noticed before, it should be brought to attention that everything bad that happened in the story started to come to play right after the wedding that the Friar made possible. Things were going swell for Romeo, he had just gotten married and everything was just fantastic until the death of Mercutio and Tybalt, where things started to get worse. If the wedding would not have happened so fast or at all, the story would not have been about two star-crossed lovers, but maybe two lovers who fought their judging families for love to have a satisfactory ending. This is not how the story of Romeo and Juliet gets its fame though. The tragedy is what makes up the story, all thanks to the Friar. This is why the Friar should be at blame for the ending of Shakespeare's "The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet".

Open Document