At the end of Romeo and Juliet, the future of most characters is unclear. Below, there are continuations of Nurse, Friar Lawrence, and Lord Capulet's stories.
This picture is of Juliet's nurse, who acted like a mother figure towards her. |
I must now depart. Victoria is waiting for me and I need to attend to her. I can finally now say without sobbing, "Goodbye, dear Juliet, and may you be happy forever with your Romeo in a better place."
Friar Lawrence's Story:
Death. I could have prevented it all if I were only more careful. Why? Why did I ever ask Juliet to carry out this dangerous plan? Why didn't I just simply arrange for her to go to Mantua and meet with Romeo there? Why did I have to risk everything? Well, I did, and now, Romeo, Juliet, Paris, and Lady Montague are all dead. The guilt consumes me every night and I can never sleep knowing that I could have prevented all of this sorrow if I had only been more
Friar Lawrence married Romeo and Juliet and helped them through their difficult marriage, which ultimately didn't work out work out |
I cannot live with this guilt and the constant reminders of Juliet and Romeo everywhere I look. I look at the majestic Capulet mansion, and all I can think about is the day they met. If I glance towards the Capulet tomb, and all I remember is their untimely deaths. Escape of Verona is my best decision. Mantua is out of the question as well; too many painful memories there. I shall go to Brescia. There, I can have a new beginning and hopefully, eventually forgive myself.
Lord Capulet's Story:
Lord Capulet (left), Juliet's father, was the one who arranged for Juliet to wed Paris, and indirectly, the one who caused both her real and fake death. |
My wife and I grieved for a day, then got over the shock and death of our daughter. Soon after, we heard that Juliet had died, once again. This confused us immensely until Friar Lawrence explained. He had helped marry Romeo and Juliet in secret, and when I announced that Juliet was to marry Paris, he gave her a poison to put her in a death-like state for 42 hours, leading everybody to believe that she was dead. However, she was actually just asleep, but when she woke up and Romeo was dead, she killed herself.
At that point, I no longer had a heir, and the Capulet family was going to die out since Juliet, as much as she irritated me, was the one who "...we scarce thought us blest / That God had lent us but this only child" (Shakespeare 214). Unless my wife had another child, the Capulet line would not continue. In the end, we decided to adopt a young set of twins, one girl and on boy. The girl we named Julietta and the boy we named Romano, as namesakes for Romeo and Juliet, whom we will never forget. Now, Julietta, Romano, my wife, and myself live happily in our mansion and attempt to live a normal life.
Vocabulary:
apprehend: arrest; take into custody
canopy: covering; protection
contempt: scorn; disdain
disperse: scatter; distribute
inexorable: unmovable; relentless
interred: buried; shut in
penury: poverty; destitution
remnants: remains; leftovers
righteous: virtuous; moral
canopy: covering; protection
contempt: scorn; disdain
disperse: scatter; distribute
inexorable: unmovable; relentless
interred: buried; shut in
penury: poverty; destitution
remnants: remains; leftovers
righteous: virtuous; moral