These
    lines are spoken byto , in act 2, scene 6, just beforeget married. Friar Laurence is warning
    Romeo not to be too rash, reckless, or extreme in the way that he loves .
When he refers to "these violent delights," Friar Laurence is referring to
    the violent intensity with which Romeo and Juliet love one another. He warns Romeo that unless
    he and Juliet learn to love one another more moderately, their love shall result in
    "violent ends." Later in the play, we discover that this warning was prescient, as
    Romeo and Juliet's love does indeed end in violence.
Friar Laurence also
    compares Romeo and Juliet's love to "fire and powder." The image evoked here is of a
    trail of gunpowder which, when set alight, becomes a trail of fire. Often there is an explosion
    at the end of a gunpowder trail, and in this sense this image too foreshadows Romeo and Juliet's
    fate. Their love is like a trail of gunpowder running throughout the play which leads,
    inevitably, to an explosion. Just a few years after the play was first performed, a group of
    Catholics tried to blow up the House of Lords with barrels of gunpowder. Thein the play to
    "fire and powder" would have thus had a particularly strong resonance for audiences
    watching the play at this time.
Continuing with the same theme of loving
    recklessly, Friar Laurence then compares Romeo and Juliet's love to "the sweetest
    honey," which, when eaten too greedily and too quickly, becomes "loathsome" and
    can make one feel ill. In other words, Friar Laurence is saying that Romeo and Juliet are
    feeding upon their love too greedily and too quickly, so it will make them ill and the love
    "loathsome."
After comparing their love to a trail of gunpowder and
    too much sweet honey, Friar Laurence tells Romeo to "love moderately"preserve the love
    rather than destroy it. Romeo, of course, is too naive and too much overwhelmed by his first
    experience of reciprocated love to heed Frair Laurence's advice. He continues to love violently
    and greedily, and his love, accordingly, ends in violence.
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