Friar Lawrence Responsible For Romeo And Juliet's Death

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Friar Lawrence once said, "May the heavens be happy with this holy act of marriage, so nothing unfortunate happens later to make us regret it." Friar Lawrence was foreshadowing that something bad was going to happen with this marriage. Based on this information, we can see how optimistic and irresponsible Friar Lawrence is, which led to the tragic deaths of Romeo and Juliet, but Tybalt and Romeo himself also played a big role in leading to the deaths because of how naive they are. Friar Lawrence, during almost any scene, was looking on the bright side, never seeing how absolutely everything could go wrong. And Romeo never thought anything through. I believe this is the reason why Friar Lawrence, Romeo, and Tybalt are responsible for Romeo and …show more content…

91–92) and the aforementioned. Friar Lawrence thought the process of marrying two minors from the opposite household without permission would be perfect, showing how optimistic he was for thinking it would go well and irresponsible for not asking to marry young children of opposites. These are the reasons why Friar Lawrence is responsible for Romeo and Juliet's deaths. In addition, Romeo himself was also at fault for his and Juliet’s deaths for his naivety. An example is when Romo didn't think things through and just assumed what Balthasar was saying, Juliet was dead, Romeo believed it was true even though he got nothing from Friar Lawrence, and instead of asking questions or finding answers, he went and killed him next to the so-called dead (asleep) Juliet. Romeo may be young, but he should be old enough to think things through, even just a little bit, or even old enough to not kill himself over a girl who he only met and married a couple days ago. Romeo had many moments when he could have stopped thinking things through, but instead rushed in and made things worse. These are a few reasons why Romeo himself is at fault for his and Juliet's

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