In the timeless play The Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet by Shakespeare all the characters along with fate had a role to play that led to the deaths of Romeo and Juliet. However, one character was the main benefactor towards this consequence. Friar Lawrence was the most accountable in directing the play towards their death due to him constructing the course of action. Throughout the play the two star-crossed lovers had gone to him to seek advice due to his role in society. Not only was he a Friar during a dominantly religious time period, he was also Romeo’s spiritual advisor so it was reasonable why they sought his advice. One of his highlighted actions in the play was how he married Romeo and Juliet. Marrying the two was an irreversible act …show more content…
Going on about how rushed they were, that he didn’t know what love truly was. In the scene where he marries the two he immediately starts off by praying, “So smile the heavens upon this holy act, That after hours with sorrow chide us not!” (Ⅱ.ⅵ.1-2). He submits to Romeo’s desire, helping them even if he felt like this was just fickle young lust. He is hoping that there won’t be some punishment for what he is about to do although there was always the option of not marrying them. Similarly he had also submitted to Juliet while she was heartbroken and devastated. Pushed to a corner by what she desires and what the world was forcing upon her. Her secret husband’s banishment, Paris’s marriage proposal, her parent’s pressure, her faith.Trapped, she felt like death was her only way out. Friar Lawrence then comes up with a drastic plan to help her out, which only advances the plot, he advises, “ A thing like death to chide away this shame, That cop’st with death himself to scape from it, And if thou darest, i’ll give thee remedy,” (Ⅳ.ⅰ.74-76). He had to think of something quick to prevent a suicide, even if he knew that this was a desperate attempt for