Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Act 2 Scene 3
Romeo meets with
Friar Lawrence
- Youth vs Age
- Friar Lawrence shows wisdom
and understanding
- Note - the only justification he offers
for agreeing to marry Romeo and
Juliet is to heal the rift between the
houses of Montague and Capulet
- "For this alliance may so happy prove
To turn your households' rancour to
pure love"
- Could this link to the theme of love?
- "Thy old groans yet ringing in mine ancient ears"
- He asks Romeo to "Be plain, good son"
- That means to stop speaking
metaphorically and say what he means!
- "Young men's love love then lies
Not truly in their hearts, but in
their eyes"
- He is saying young men are
attracted to women based on their
looks rather than for who they are
as a person
- Different types of love
- OPPOSTITES
- Friar Lawrence refers
to lots of opposites
- This could represent how complex
life is and that all decisions in life
are not straight forward
- Remember Friar Lawrence is faced
with an agonising decision
- Does he marry them
knowing that they are
disobeying their parents
wishes?
- But if he does, then he knows
this could heal the rift between
the two families?
- HONOUR
- It shows he understands that
good and evil are closely related
- "Within the infant rind of this weak
flower Poison hath residence, and
medicine power"
- This means that
poison and medicine
can be derived from
the same plant
- "Virtue itself turns vice, being misapplied
and vice sometime by action dignified."
- Not only is this an opposite - this is ironic as he is
about to set in place a series of events which lead to
the deaths of both Romeo and Juliet by agreeing to
marry them - EVEN THOUGH his intentions are good
- This could also link to FATE
- Friar Lawrence's view of
the world is delivered by
soliloquy
- This could represent ...
- We also learn lots
about Romeo in this
scene
- Romeo says to Friar
Lawrence that he told
him off for loving
Rosaline
- Friar Lawrence replies by saying
"For doting, not for loving, pupil
mine"
- This shows that Friar Lawrence knew
that Romeo's love for Rosaline was
infatuation rather than true love
- Perhaps this is another
reason why he agreed to
marry Romeo and Juliet
- They refer to each other as "thee"
and "thou" which shows they have a
friendly relationship just like Juliet
and the Nurse
- The scene ends when Friar Lawrence
says "Wisely and slow, they stumble that
run fast"
- This could be a prophecy about what is
going to happen in the play
- Dramatic irony - we already
know what is going to happen
- Another demonstration
of his wisdom which perhaps
comes with AGE
- YOUTH vs AGE
- FATE
- TIME
- Friar Lawrence is a Catholic
Priest. Catholicism is a strict form
of Christianity which is very moral
and is founded on an idea of guilt
if you sin.