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How Does Friar Lawrence Influence Romeo And Juliet

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The tragic death of Romeo and Juliet was majorly influenced by the works and words of Friar Lawrence, due to his impulsive nature and his selfish, cowardly actions. Shakespeare demonstrates Friar Lawrence’s impulsiveness when Juliet comes to him, seeking a way to get out of marrying Paris while Romeo is away. Friar rashly comes up with a devious plan which had doom written on it from the start. Friar told Juliet to take a potion to fake her death so she would be buried and later found by Romeo. This shows Friar’s impulsiveness because he didn’t think out the possible outcomes or the safety and fool-proofing of the plan; and he just rashly decided to fake the death of a precious child in a great family—which was not only sneaky but unmorally right in the eyes of a trusted friar. …show more content…

An example of this is when Friar flees the tomb which held Juliet, saying he heard “noises.” Friar Lawrence knew full well what Juliet’s intentions were with dead Romeo, and he left her alone—he left her to die. Friar Lawrence may have left purposefully, with the intention that Juliet would hopefully kill herself over Romeo, because he wanted his mistake of marrying the young two secretly to be covered up by death. Friar left a devastated Juliet in a tomb with her dead husband because he was “afraid” of noises coming, and he wasn’t enough of a man to brave up and comfort Juliet or take her from the tomb so she wouldn’t kill herself. This shows that Friar is a selfish man because he let others die to cover for his mistakes, and he is also a coward because he left a 13 year old broken-hearted girl to herself with her dead love with no more than a recessive invitation to exit the

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