Juliet gives voice to her thoughts in a long soliloquy in Act 4 Scene 3 of the play. She worries that:
1. The potion won't work and she'll have to marry Paris anyway. No, if that happens she'll just kill herself with a dagger.
2. The potion is really a poison. No, not Friar Lawrence!
3. She will wake up before Romeo shows and be stuck with a bunch of dead people, like Tybalt, which will drive her crazy.
Juliet gives voice to her thoughts in a long soliloquy in Act 4 Scene 3 of the play. She worries that:
1. "What if this mixture do not work at all?" (Act 4, Scene 3, 21.) She fears that either it might not work and she'll have to marry Paris the next morning. No, if that happens she'll just kill herself with a dagger.
2. "What if it be a poison, which the friar/ Subtly hath minister'd to have me dead… (Act 4, Scene 3, 24-25) Juliet is fearful that the potion is really a poison and she might die. No, not Friar Lawrence!
3. Juliet feared that the potion may wear off before it is supposed to and she will wake up before Romeo shows and be stuck with a bunch of dead people, like Tybalt, which will drive her crazy.Or that she might die in the place where they lay her if Romeo never comes.
She decides that life with Romeo is worth these risks and drinks the potion.
Juliet is still alive
She begins to have doubts that she might not awake from the potion and that she might die after she has taking the potion.
watermilkwarm milkjuiceand other drinkes but not sada
Drinking the potion is a couragous thing, it is also a follish thing to do. Juliet drank the potion so Romeo could save her and it would end the feud netween the the two families. But Juliet drank it without informing Romeo about the plan, so Romeo found her dead and they were so in love that he killed himselfwith his dagger to be with Juliet. Juliet then woke up to find her lovers dead body, which caused her real death.Juliet had stabbed her self with Romeoes dagger. Drinking the potion is couragous but in the end is a foolish.
It's a poison, and she is probabbly very happy that she will finally be with Romeo in a place of peace.
All of those thoughts which she expresses in her magnificent soliloquy in Act IV Scene 3, and which I might summarize and express much less effectively as "Oooh, what if it doesn't work, and oooh, what if the friar was lying, and oooh, won't it be disgusting if I wake up in a tomb full of decaying corpses?"
Juliet's worst fears before drinking the potion in "Romeo and Juliet" include waking up alone in the tomb, being buried alive, and potentially suffering a violent death if the plan fails. She is also afraid of the uncertainty of the potion's effects and whether Romeo will truly be there to rescue her.
She begins to have doubts that she might not awake from the potion and that she might die after she has taking the potion.
1. What if it does not work. 2. What if it is a poison that is given to her that will kill her. 3. What if she wakes up before Romeo comes.
watermilkwarm milkjuiceand other drinkes but not sada
In her soliloquy before drinking the potion, Juliet does not express regret over her love for Romeo. She is instead focused on finding a way to be with him despite the obstacles in their path.
Yes, Juliet's backup plan is to use a dagger if the potion doesn't work. She fears waking up in the tomb before Romeo arrives and chooses to have the dagger as a way to prevent herself from a painful death if the potion fails.
Romeo finds Juliet's body in her bedroom after she has taken a potion that makes her appear dead.
Juliet's decision to drink the potion can be seen as both foolhardy and courageous. It is foolhardy because she is taking a risk by putting her trust in Friar Lawrence's plan without knowing all the potential consequences. However, it can also be seen as courageous because she is willing to face death in order to be with Romeo, showing her deep love and commitment to him.
Dr. Jekyll only waited one week before drinking the potion again and transforming into Mr. Hyde.
Juliet lays a dagger on her bed before drinking the potion as a contingency plan in case the potion does not work and she wakes up before Romeo arrives to rescue her. The dagger symbolizes her determination to take control of her own fate and avoid an undesirable outcome.
Juliet fears that the potion might not work, that it could be a test of her loyalty to Romeo, or that she might wake up before Romeo arrives. She is also scared of being alone and trapped in the tomb.
Friar Laurence tells Juliet that she will appear dead for 42 hours after she drinks the potion, and then she will wake up as if from a pleasant sleep.