Romeo and Juliet, II, viFRIAR LAURENCE: The sweetest honeyIs loathsome in his own deliciousness,And in the taste confounds the appetite.Therefore love moderately; long love doth so.Romeo and Juliet, II, viFRIAR LAURENCE: Too swift arrives as tardy as too slow.
Friar Lawrence. It's part of the long-term plan he unfolds to Romeo after Romeo is banished.
I think it's because she took so long to answer Juliet. She beat around the bush and asked "where is your mother" before telling Juliet about the plans. *******************************OR***************************** If you mean at the end when she sends the nurse away to drink to potion it's because 1. Friar Laurence told her to be all alone earlier in his instructions so that nobody other then himself and Romeo would know she's alive. 2. Juliet was still mad at the Nurse for saying that Romeo might as well be dead to her and she should just marry Paris.
Juliet first tells Paris she is going to marry him. Then the night before the wedding day she drinks a potion that she got from Friar Laurence, as Friar Laurence decides to help her be with Romeo. (He decides to help only because it would be a sin to marry Juliet to two people.) Anyways, the potion is suppose to make her seem dead. Then there is a above ground tomb where all the Capulets are barried and she will be barried there. She is willing to stay in there for a long time until the potion wears out. As she stays in there Friar Laurence is to tell Romeo about everything that happened so Romeo could rescue her.
The characters in scene one of Romeo and Juliet are: Sampson and Gregory-Serving-men of the Capulets Abram-Montague's serving-men Benvolio-Montagues nephew Tybalt-Capulets nephew Capulet- Juliet's father Capulets wife- Juliet's mother Montague- Romeo's father Montague's wife- Romeo's father Escalus- Prince of Verona
Friar Lawrence in Romeo Juliet
Romeo and Juliet, II, viFRIAR LAURENCE: The sweetest honeyIs loathsome in his own deliciousness,And in the taste confounds the appetite.Therefore love moderately; long love doth so.Romeo and Juliet, II, viFRIAR LAURENCE: Too swift arrives as tardy as too slow.
Friar Lawrence. It's part of the long-term plan he unfolds to Romeo after Romeo is banished.
I think it's because she took so long to answer Juliet. She beat around the bush and asked "where is your mother" before telling Juliet about the plans. *******************************OR***************************** If you mean at the end when she sends the nurse away to drink to potion it's because 1. Friar Laurence told her to be all alone earlier in his instructions so that nobody other then himself and Romeo would know she's alive. 2. Juliet was still mad at the Nurse for saying that Romeo might as well be dead to her and she should just marry Paris.
Juliet first tells Paris she is going to marry him. Then the night before the wedding day she drinks a potion that she got from Friar Laurence, as Friar Laurence decides to help her be with Romeo. (He decides to help only because it would be a sin to marry Juliet to two people.) Anyways, the potion is suppose to make her seem dead. Then there is a above ground tomb where all the Capulets are barried and she will be barried there. She is willing to stay in there for a long time until the potion wears out. As she stays in there Friar Laurence is to tell Romeo about everything that happened so Romeo could rescue her.
It comprises almost all of Act 5 Scene 2 of Romeo and Juliet. The whole conversation is no more than 22 lines long. Friar John tells Friar Lawrence that he couldn't deliver the message to Romeo because he was quarantined for exposure to the plague.
Friar Lawrence suggests the desperate solution of faking Juliet's death because he believes it will prevent her from having to marry Paris, which would be a great sin. He also sees it as a way to reunite her with Romeo in the long run. However, his plan ultimately backfires and leads to tragedy.
After he hears that Friar John has not been able to deliver his message to Romeo, he says "Now must I to the monument alone; Within this three hours will fair Juliet wake: She will beshrew me much that Romeo Hath had no notice of these accidents". However, he should have realized long before that Romeo would have no notice of the fact that Juliet was not dead and would be waking up in an hour because the wedding had been moved up a day. He was officiating at the wedding; he can't have forgotten. But although he seems to realize the urgency of getting to Juliet before she wakes up in three hours time, he takes his time about it, and only arrives at the exact moment Juliet wakes, and about a half-hour too late to save Romeo.
The characters in scene one of Romeo and Juliet are: Sampson and Gregory-Serving-men of the Capulets Abram-Montague's serving-men Benvolio-Montagues nephew Tybalt-Capulets nephew Capulet- Juliet's father Capulets wife- Juliet's mother Montague- Romeo's father Montague's wife- Romeo's father Escalus- Prince of Verona
Romeo and Juliet do get married in the play, but it is not in a scene. When it is played in theatres etc, they have the chose whether or not to put it into the play as shakepeare did not. You know like an added part. Oh and they get married in Friar Laurences cell!
This quote from Friar Lawrence means that if you love in moderation, your love will last a long time. He is warning Romeo not to be so obsessive in his love for Juliet as he was with Rosaline. The less obsessive his love is the better things will end up for him and Juliet.
You need to specify which of the several Romeo and Juliet movies you are talking about.