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9 answers

Friar lawerence gives romeo a potion for him to fall asleep, and he goes to fall asleep, then juliet finds him and kills herself because she thinks that romeo has done the same ;]

2007-10-10 13:20:14 · answer #1 · answered by Kewldewwd 1 · 0 1

properly the friar did a set of unlawful issues (i.e. marrying romeo and juliet without the mum and dad' consent, offering juliet with the potion, no longer seeing to make effective that the word have been given to romeo, etc.) Romeo is in charge because of the fact he killed tybalt. Had he no longer killed tybalt (and enable's purely say that tybalt does no longer have killed romeo), they could have lived fortunately ever after. i think of the Nurse is likewise in charge for the dying of romeo and juliet as properly. She did no longer tell any of this to juliet's mum and dad. She could no longer provide juliet the help that she necessary.

2016-12-18 04:09:57 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Isn't English lit homework a pain....they always want you to write about what they make you read! haven't you got a mate you can copy from? I remember being carted off by the school to see the play at the RSC, nightmare, Romeo and Juliet seemed to last 4 terms and sorry I can't be of any help to ya cos guess what..I've forgotten it all... as you will too. Why do they put us through it eh?

2007-10-10 13:33:33 · answer #3 · answered by JP32 4 · 0 0

This sounds like an exam question!

I'd say it's pretty important, he enables a good deal of what happens between them, bad and good. Without him, the story may not have been a tragedy. He steers the plot in a huge way as both Romeo and Juliet look to him for guidance on overcoming obstacles which have been orchestrated by themselves and others to a larger extent.

With him, they are doomed, without him they are also doomed.

2007-10-10 13:24:48 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"The pleasures of love are always in proportion to our fears" because passionate love is also partly about terror.Shakespeare had it down cold,when he had Friar Laurence warn young Romeo of the perils of passion: "These violent delights have violent ends." And did Romeo listen?

2007-10-10 15:37:47 · answer #5 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

He is a homosexual friar. He is in love with Romeo, but Juliette is in his way.

2007-10-10 13:17:23 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

honestly i'd love to help you but that's something you can easily figure out if you just read the play. If you' read the play and still don't understand i'll be glad to help you.

2007-10-11 04:29:15 · answer #7 · answered by daydreamer 3 · 0 0

Oh for heaven's sake. Think! What does he do that determines the out come of the play? Read it and do your own homework.

2007-10-10 13:22:06 · answer #8 · answered by Theatre Doc 7 · 1 1

dunno

2007-10-10 13:15:37 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

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