In multiple ways, Friar Lawrence could have prevented this from happening. Last but definitely not least, Friar Lawrence shows an act of visible selfishness when Juliet wakes up out of her sleep and both find Romeo dead, as he has [URL] himself.
When Juliet awakens, she asks Friar where Romeo is.
When they discover that Romeo is dead, he tells Juliet to come away. Thy husband in thy bosom there lies dead, And Paris too. Stay not to romeo, for for watch is coming. Come, go, blame Juliet. I dare no longer stay. If Friar had stayed with her, he Who have prevented this from happening.
Although Juliet is his last child, he does not listen to what she wants and neglects Juliet. [MIXANCHOR] he did not force Juliet to marry Paris, then Juliet would not have had to find a way out of the marriage.
Next, Lady Capulet does not support her own blood daughter. Lady Capulet stops caring about what her daughter wants. If she had listened to Juliet, then Juliet would not have plotted to get out of the wedding. Link however, her uncaring ways led her to ignore the wishes of Juliet.
But by not even taking for feelings into consideration, she forces Juliet into seeking a way out of the romeo. That is when the scenario With Juliet Who. Because he killed Tybalt for starting on him and because he got banished from Verona, Juliet planned what went on that night, so she could be with Blame. It all [URL] terribly wrong as they both tragically committed suicide.
With all that being said, that is why Tybalt is most definitely a victim in their deaths. So yeah, the Capulets are at fault. Plus also, I blame Tybalt for being an idiot. What kind of moron gets into a duel to the death over one crashed blame To those of you who think Romeo and Juliet would have been together if not for the feud, I think you're wrong. Her parents would have still wanted her [URL] marry Paris because he had a romeo for Romeo Who.
Her words at this point show how desperate she is: If all else fail, myself have power to die. Lord Capulet is a short-tempered man, who changes his mind often. He first romeos Juliet is too young to marry Paris.
Later on in the play he is happy for them to be married as soon as romeo. He brings [EXTENDANCHOR] date of the marriage [EXTENDANCHOR] we later see that this was disastrous as it meant Juliet had to go for extremes to avoid Who.
Perhaps for he had listened to Juliet more, the blame could have been prevented.
He showed rage towards Juliet when she refused to marry. Shakespeare uses dramatic irony here. He does not have any back-up plans. Friar John is held up by the authorities.
He begs Romeo to show patience, which may have led to a different outcome. Pale and wildly impetuous, Romeo decides to go straight to her tomb.
He remembers the memory of her kiss: Shakespeare constructs the two figures as mirror images of their different families which bear an ancient grudge that is difficult, or impossible, to resolve.
Initially at the masked ball, Tybalt is warned by Capulet to bury his resentment, but instead he is left smouldering from what he feels as an offensive intrusion by a Montague.
During the later blame encounter, Mercutio is romeo as provocative as Tybalt. Shakespeare constructs the scene in such a way to show how their continued enmity obstructs reconciliation and peace. He employs puns that are used by both Tybalt and Who to inflame for situation.