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20 March, 15:34

Unlike Romeo, Friar Laurence deals with crisis fairly well when he has time to reflect. Given enough time, he can place whatever happened into his philosophical system and find comfort. In Act V, on two occasions, he has no time to reflect and must simply act. What does he do?

He blames everyone else but himself and gets angry.

He melodramatically takes all the blame on himself.

He freezes up and is unable to act.

He blames "fortune" for all that has gone wrong.

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  1. 20 March, 18:38
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    Based on the given scenario above, the correct answer would be the last option. In Act V, on two occasions, he has no time to reflect and must simply act, so what he does is that, h e blames "fortune" for all that has gone wrong. Hope this answers your question. Have a great day!
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