The reader can infer that the Friar is involved in marriage arrangements and may prioritize financial gain over his religious duties. The Friar's actions suggest he is not completely focused on his role as a religious figure, and instead is more interested in profiting from his position. This can imply he is opportunistic and may bend the rules for personal gain.
All of the prologue, taken as a whole, is a sonnet. A sonnet is a fourteen-line poem with a certain structure. The Prologue is fourteen lines long and has that structure.
The word that means to get facts or context to figure out what is being implied by reading between the lines is "infer."
No, it is in strict Iambic Pentametor.
It all depends on the length of the prologue and the regularity of the metre. The prologue to Romeo and Juliet is fourteen lines long, and each line contains approximately five iambs, making a total of seventy in the whole prologue. That's more or less, since lines like "From ancient grudge break to new mutiny", it can be argued, contain only four iambs and one trochee. Romeo and Juliet is not the only one of Shakespeare's plays which has a prologue, however. Henry V has a particularly famous one which is 34 lines long, which would contain one hundred and seventy iambs if it were regular. (It isn't though. The first line "O for a muse of fire that would ascend" contains only 4 iambs and starts with a trochee) The Prologue to Henry IV Part II has 40 lines (200 iambs more or less) and the Prologue to Pericles has 42 lines of iambic tetrameter with 4 iambs to the regular line, a total of 168, more or less.
A prologue, or prolog, is an opening to a story that establishes the setting and gives background details, often some earlier story that ties into the main one, and other miscellaneous information. Prologue is not a poem.
not to do everything quickly and not to be to hasty otherwise he will face misfortunes
He occasionally borrowed in altered form plots and even lines of verse.
It comprises almost all of Act 5 Scene 2 of Romeo and Juliet. The whole conversation is no more than 22 lines long. Friar John tells Friar Lawrence that he couldn't deliver the message to Romeo because he was quarantined for exposure to the plague.
The first four lines of the prologue rhyme the words "dignity", "scene", "mutiny" and "unclean".
In lines 35-42 of "The Prologue" in Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales," Chaucer states that he will accurately and truthfully recount the stories he has heard and seen during his travels, without embellishment or concealment. He promises to faithfully present the characters he encounters on the pilgrimage to Canterbury.
Possibly it is the fact that three of the Friar's first four lines after Romeo enters begin "Young son", "That's my good son", and "Be plain, good son". Of course, as Romeo's priest, the Friar is supposed to be his spiritual father; it's in his job description.
Of course an easy way of determining this would be to read it - it is available free of charge at the library or under books.google.com Having said that: Shakespeare wrote in iambic (2) pentameter (5) which means that virtually all of the lines in his plays, unless he wanted the scene to be odd or other worldly, have 10 (ten) syllables. This is also true of the prologue of Romeo and Juliet.