Shortly after Romeo and Juliet first meet, they decide to have an “exchange of [their] love’s faithful vow”, meaning a vow of marriage (Shakespeare 2.2.127). The two characters turn to Friar Laurence to officiate the marriage. While Friar Laurence agrees, his hopes for the marriage were not to make Romeo and Juliet happy, but rather to mend the feud between their families. He believes the “alliance” between the two would “turn [their] households’ rancor to pure love” (Shakespeare 2.3.90-92). Friar Laurence has other priorities that he sees as more important than the newlyweds and their happiness.
Friar Laurence contributes to the events that leads to the lover’s deaths when he agrees to marry them after being angry at Romeo for loving the daughter of Capulet. FRIAR LAURENCE: “In one respect I’ll thy assistant be;/ For this alliance may so happy prove/ To turn your households’ rancor to pure love.” (2.3.98-100) As a result of Friar Laurence’s decision to marry the two, Romeo and Juliet’s fate is sealed. By choosing to turn the two households to pure love by marrying the star-crossed lovers allow this tragedy to
While there are many different characters in this play, the Nurse is a prominent character shown in most of the play. She works with the Capulets, and most closely Juliet. On the outside, the Nurse seems like an innocent, caring woman that puts her job first before anything else, but you all would be wrong. The Nurse had been a loved and quite useful member of their family, until now.
The marriage couldn’t have happened without Friar Laurence. Also readers might think that Friar was selfish by just wanting to end the family conflict by marrying them. You may ask why? Because Friar wouldn’t be directly involved and he wouldn’t see the consequences that Romeo and Juliet would see. Also for his far fetched plan to get them back together.
Within the tragedy, Lady Capulet and the Nurse both show different characteristics which make the play more relatable for different audiences. Lady Capulet has a distant relationship and lack of affection for Juliet whereas the Nurse had a close relationship and loving affection for Juliet. Even though Lady Capulet and Juliet were not close, Juliet had the Nurse to act as a friend and confidant like the classic teenage relationship that we all have with our friends versus our
The Nurse is to Blame for Juliet's Predicament in Romeo and Juliet Everyone is faced with a difficult situation sometime in their life where the two different choices will result in totally different outcomes. A situation where once a decision is made they can’t go back. In the play Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet are from feuding families. They meet, fall in love, and get married with help from Juliet’s nurse and Friar Laurence.
Throughout Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet, many characters with a variety of personalities are introduced. In the play qualities such as being hypocritical, inconsistent and annoying can be seen. Also qualities like loyalty and being a caring person are also displayed. The nurse is a character that possesses all of these qualities. She is a much more complexed character than what most people take her to be.
The Nurse is another character that must share a portion of the blame in the tragic deaths of Romeo and Juliet. She was Juliet's trusted friend and in some circumstances could be held in the like regard as a mother figure. She acted as an intercessor between Juliet, Romeo, and Friar Laurence. She would send letters to Romeo for Juliet, and was the only one out side of the three that knew of the secrete marriage plans. She was Juliet's closest confidant, alerting her to Tybalt's and Paris's death It was the Nurse who first realized Juliet and Romeo tragically killed themselves after the foiled scheme.
The Nurse and Friar Laurence helped Romeo and Juliet to commit suicide. William Shakespeare writes the play. The title of the story is “The tragedy of Romeo and Juliet”. There were two feuding families who would fight all the time. There were two lovers from the families who thought they would love each there until the end of time but they both died over the feud and the feud end.
Things were probably very different back in the Elizabethan Era when the play was written, so the story happens in the Capulet’s household refreshes my understanding about motherhood back in that time. Lady Capulet and the Nurse are the two important women that form great contrast. Although Lady Capulet and the Nurse both played a similar motherhood role as regard to Juliet, their behaviors and wishes for Juliet are completely different. Both of Lady Capulet and the Nurse has watched Juliet growing up since she is born. Lady
During the Romeo and Juliet play, fate was not on their side; many actions by others forced irrational decisions on the two star-crossed lovers. There can be many people to blame for the outcome of Romeo and Juliet's deaths, but the fault can be mainly put on the nurse, Lord Capuet, and friar Lawrence. In Romeo and Juliet, the nurse played a very big role in the progression of their relationship, going as far as helping with advice and helping them get married. The nurse has raised Juliet with Lady Capulet and wants to see Juliet happy with Romeo. She understands their love for each other.
The Qualities of The Nurse In Romeo and Juliet, the Nurse exhibits multiple characteristics the first time she is introduced. For example, the Nurse possesses down-to-earth as well as exuberant qualities, shaping her relationship with Juliet and the rest of the Capulet family. Later in the play, the Nurse’s qualities affect her relationship by making herself closer to the family. To begin, the Nurse exhibits her down-to earth personality with nicknames and inappropriate innuendo towards Julie, showing that she is very close and comfortable with her. For instance, the Nurse calls Juliet by “Jule” as a nickname.
Romeo and Juliet is a story of hasty decisions. The young couple must quickly decide to get married, how to act after Romeo is exiled, and whether or not to take their own lives. Many of these decisions are made under the guidance of the children’s mentors, Friar Laurence and the Nurse. Throughout this tragedy, Friar Laurence and the Nurse are the only adults that Romeo and Juliet seem to feel that they can trust and are in turn some of the main people that influence the outcome of the play. The Nurse and Friar Laurence play very similar roles, both in the play and the lives of the children, but the ways in which they advise and influence the children include more differences.
Throughout the play Romeo and Juliet, written by William Shakespeare, the Nurse and Friar Laurence played similar roles, both acting as mentors to the young couple. The hatred and tension between the Montagues and Capulets resulted in Romeo and Juliet’s marriage being kept a secret. They had no other choice then to confide their love for one another to the Nurse and Friar Laurence. Romeo and Juliet had warring parents who were not extremely involved in their everyday lives, therefore, the Nurse and Friar Laurence acted as parental figures toward them, guiding them through complicated situations to the best of their ability. These two characters wanted the best for the newlywed couple; however, both contributed to the tragic ending of Romeo and Juliet, making some of their guidance useful and some of it useless.
Lastly, Shakespeare uses Romeo and Juliet to show true love. Nurse shows parental love to Juliet throughout the play. Despite being a servant to the Capulet household, she has a role equivalent to that of Juliet’s mothers and regards Juliet as her own. Even with the fact that Nurse is not the birth mother of Juliet, she still treats Juliet like a daughter. Nurse cares about Juliet and wants her to be happy and find success.”