The feud was passed down from generations, and nobody is sure why it started. Instead of going and trying to make amends with the two families, Friar Lawrence says to Romeo, “For this alliance may so happy prove / to turn your households’ rancour to pure love” (2.3.91-92). This quote shows that Friar Lawrence depended on them getting married and expecting the families to resolve their conflict. It was a bad idea for the two to get married so rationally, and he did not try talking them out of it, rather he went along with the idea. Friar Lawrence did not think Romeo’s love for Juliet was real because he had just loved Rosaline, “Is Rosaline, whom thou didst love so dear / so young forsaken? Young men’s love then lies / Not truly in their hearts, but in their eyes” (2.2.66-68). Still, he agreed to marry them anyway. Even though Romeo and Juliet could have taken the responsibility to wait, Friar could have taken the responsibility to not marry them and make them wait until they knew each other better. “So smile the heavens upon this holy act / that after hours with sorrow chide us not!” (2.6.1-2) is what Friar Lawrence says to Romeo. He is hoping that the marriage will work out for the two of them, and that fate and the heavens won’t make them regret the decision of marring so soon. This also shows that he is depending on the marriage to work out, which doesn’t in the…