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- By Anthony Chan 10A
-
- Romeo & Juliet.
-
-
-
- Romeo and Juliet is
- one of Shakespeare's plays about tragedy. It is about two lovers who commit
- suicide when their feuding famillies prevent them from being together. The
- play has many characters, each with its own role in keeping the plot line.
- Some characters have very little to do with the plot but some have the plot
- revolving around them. Friar Lawrence does not have very much time on stage
- but the time he does have is crucial to the plot line. Through his words Friar
- Lawrence demonstrates the he is a good intentioned, yet sometimes short-sighted,
- man who is not afraid to take risks to help others
-
- One of Friar Lawrences
- most favourable traits is how good intentioned he is. He may do something
- out of the ordinary if he thinks the outcome will help someone he cares for.
- For example, when he says "In one respect I'll thy assistant be; for this
- alliance may so happy prove, to turn your households rancour to pure love."(Act
- 2, Scene 3), he is saying that the only reason he will marry Romeo and Juliet
- is because he hopes that the marriage will end the hostilities between the
- two houses. When he says "Shall Romeo by my letters know our drift, and hither
- shall he come; and he and I shall watch thy waking, and that very night shall
- Romeo bear thee to Mantua." (Act 4, Scene 1), he tells Juliet how everything
- will be all right. Unfortunately, for all his good intentions the play still
- ends in tragedy.
-
- Friar Lawrence is a man who is not afraid to take risks
- when he feels it is neccesary to help someone. For example in Act 2, Scene
- 6, when he marries Romeo and Juliet, he is risking his reputation as a Friar
- so he can help the two lovers. Also, when he says "Take thou this vial, being
- then in bed, and this distilled liquor drink though off;" (Act 4, Scene 1),
- he is suggesting that Juliet drink a potion so that she might feighn her own
- death and avoid marrying Paris. This is an extremely risky thing to do because
- anything might happen to Juliet while she unconscious.
-
- Even after all Friar
- did to help Romeo and Juliet the play still ended in tragedy because of Friar
- Lawrences' short sightedness.
- When the Friar married Romeo Juliet in secrecy,
- he did not think of all the complications that would arise but instead went
- on with the marriage because at that time he thought it was the right thing
- to do. In Act 4, Scene 1, he gave Juliet a sleeping potion without thinking
- of the possible outcomes of such an outrages plan. He admits that much of
- the fault of the tragedy lies in his hands when he says "And her I stand both
- to impeach and purge myself condemned and myself excused", and when he say
- "Her nurse is privy; and, if aught in this miscarried by myself..." (Act 5,
- Scene 3).
-
- Although Friar Lawrence does not have an especially large role,
- his role is none the less important. It is because of his good intentions
- that he was willing to help his friends that Romeo and Juliet were married
- - a key event in the play. It is because of his willingness to take risks
- for his friends that Juliet aqquired the sleeping potion - another key event
- in the play. Finally, it was the shortsightedness of his actions that in part
- led to the deaths of the two lead characters. This demonstartes that Friar
- Lawrence was a man who was a man with good intentions who was willing to take
- risks to help his frieneds. If he had been any other way, the play might not
- have turned out the way it did.
-