 Studying Romeo and Juliet. Here's how you can analyse Act 2, Scene 3 when you first meet Friar Lawrence. The scene begins in the morning with Friar Lawrence noticing the great eyed morn smiles on the frowning night. Pathetic fallacy creates a sense of hope. It shows the start of a new day. He's filling his basket with different plants here and this shows that he knows how plants work and he can create different medicines and poisons. When Romeo appears Friar Lawrence calls him Benedict. We can see in this exclamatory sentence he's really close to Romeo. He's worried Romeo hasn't slept and this is shown through this iambit pentameter. Romeo bids he had a sweeter rest than sleep and Friar Lawrence's response hair shows he's terrified that Romeo had sex. Romeo confesses in this rhyming couplet that he is now in love with Juliet. Romeo then begs Friar Lawrence hair to marry them. Friar Lawrence is shocked at how Romeo has moved on from Rosaline and we can see in this hyperphora that he is mocking how fickle Romeo's feelings are. Yet Friar Lawrence agrees to marry them and he hopes that the marriage will end the feud.