| Character | Wrong Choice | Consequence | Right Choice |
| 1. Prince Escalus. | Delays in banning the Montague-Capulet feud until the fourth outbreak. | Memories have grown too long and passions too high, so that the feud breaks out again despite his ban. | He should have issued his ban after the first brawl. |
| 2. Mercutio. | Allows himself to be baited by Tybalt. | He gets killed and Romeo is tempted to take personal vengeance. | He should have listened to Benvolio and avoided a quarrel. |
| 3. Romeo. | Takes personal vengeance on Tybalt for Mercutio's death. | He is banished. | He should have left the punishment of Tybalt to the Prince. |
| 4. Capulet. | Insists on a speedy marriage of Juliet to Paris. | She takes the potion to avoid it. | He should have stuck to his original intention of letting Juliet make up her own mind. |
| 5. Friar Laurence. | Gives Juliet the potion. | Believing her dead, Romeo is tempted to suicide. | He should have gone to Capulet or to the Prince and told them that Juliet was already married. |
| 6. The Nurse. | Advises Juliet to forget Romeo and commit bigamy. | Juliet does not confide in her about the potion scheme. | She should have kept her mouth shut. |
| 7. The Apothecary. | Sells poison to Romeo. | Romeo's temptation to suicide is strengthened by his possession of the means. | He should have obeyed the law and refused to sell Romeo the poison. |
| 8. Romeo. | Kills himself. | He is damned. | Even if Juliet had really been dead, he should, at whatever cost of suffering, have remained alive and true to her memory. |
| 9. Friar Laurence. | Leaves Juliet alone when he hears the watch coming. | Juliet's temptation to commit suicide is strengthened by being given the opportunity. | At whatever cost to himself, he should have stayed with Juliet to prevent her killing herself. |
| 10. Juliet. | Kills herself. | She is damned. | She should have remained alive and true to Romeo's memory. |
| | | | (30-31) |