“Hold, daughter! I do spy a kind of hope, which craves as desperate an execution” (IV.i. 69-70). When Juliet came to him for help, instead of taking more time to find a solution, for Paris and Juliet’s dilemma, he felt pressured to help Juliet so that she would not commit suicide, and suggested the plan that led to Romeo and Juliet’s death. The Friar would have simply refused not to help the lovers anymore if he used his common sense, instead he succumbed to their desires, again, and formed an impulsive plan in his mind on the spit with out weighing the consequences. Friar Lawrence, who is displayed as a man of god, is actually just as impulsive as Romeo and
“Hold, daughter! I do spy a kind of hope, which craves as desperate an execution” (IV.i. 69-70). When Juliet came to him for help, instead of taking more time to find a solution, for Paris and Juliet’s dilemma, he felt pressured to help Juliet so that she would not commit suicide, and suggested the plan that led to Romeo and Juliet’s death. The Friar would have simply refused not to help the lovers anymore if he used his common sense, instead he succumbed to their desires, again, and formed an impulsive plan in his mind on the spit with out weighing the consequences. Friar Lawrence, who is displayed as a man of god, is actually just as impulsive as Romeo and