Respuesta :
In lines spoken by Friar Laurence in "Romeo and Juliet," the details that support the idea that secrets lead to catastrophe are:
B. "their stolen marriage-day"
D. "For whom, and not for Tybalt, Juliet pin'd"
E. "for it wrought on her / The form of death"
- At this point in the tragic play "Romeo and Juliet," Friar Laurence tells the truth about Romeo and Juliet's secrets. However, the couple is already dead.
- As the friar speaks, we can see the connection between the secrets and the catastrophic ending the couple met.
- When the friar says, "their stolen marriage-day," he means Juliet and Romeo married each other in secret.
- When he says, "For whom, and not for Tybalt, Juliet pin'd," he means that Juliet loved Romeo rather than Tybalt, but no one knew.
- Finally, when he says, "for it wrought on her / The form of death," he is talking about the potion he gave Juliet to help her look as if she had died.
- All of those secrets led to the misunderstanding that ended up killing the couple.
- With that in mind, options B, D, and E are the best ones.
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