it will work too well, it wont work at all, romeo wont show up or just wont care about her "death" . Or being alone with all the bodies, continuing their lives together.
She fears that either it might not work and she'll have to marry Paris the next morning, and that it might be a poison and she might die.
"What if this mixture do not work at all?" (Act 4, Scene 3, 21.)
"What if it be a poison, which the friar/ Subtly hath minister'd to have me dead… (Act 4, Scene 3, 24-25)
She fears that either it might not work and she'll have to marry Paris the next morning, and that it might be a poison and she might die.
"What if this mixture do not work at all?" (Act 4, Scene 3, 21.)
"What if it be a poison, which the friar/ Subtly hath minister'd to have me dead… (Act 4, Scene 3, 24-25)
In Act IV scene iii, Juliet hesitates before taking the poison, as she must overcome certain fears.
First, she is afraid that the poison won't do anything at all.
Second, she is afraid that the friar has really given her poison which will really kill her so he won't have to reveal that he married her to Romeo.
Third, she is afraid that she will wake too early and be unable to breathe and waking up in a tomb will be so scary that it will drive her .
she is scared that she may wake up in the tomb and sufficate and that she may actually die and that romeo is not there on time and she may go mad with fear
She is afraid of several things:
-the potion won't work
-it is actually poison from the friar
-the sights she will see upon waking up in the Capulet tomb
the potion won't work
she'll suffocate in the tomb
she'll turn crazy
Several things: that the potion will not work, that it will kill her, and that she will wake up surrounded by decaying corpses before anyone comes to get her.
Whether or not the potion will kill her or not. If it will really 'work'. Whether she'll be able to see Romeo again.
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.
He doesn't tell her anything. He thinks she's dead and that's what she appears to be. He talks to her the same way characters talk to the moon (this is called apostrophe), but he doesn't expect her to hear him.
He would have realized that she was breathing. If Romeo had but an ounce of sence he would have checked to see if Juliet was breathing before committing suicide.If Romeo had not been so hasty in drinking the poison, he would have noticed that Juliet's lips and cheeks were crimson. She was beginning to wake up from the potion.
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
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
He doesn't tell her anything. He thinks she's dead and that's what she appears to be. He talks to her the same way characters talk to the moon (this is called apostrophe), but he doesn't expect her to hear him.
He would have realized that she was breathing. If Romeo had but an ounce of sence he would have checked to see if Juliet was breathing before committing suicide.If Romeo had not been so hasty in drinking the poison, he would have noticed that Juliet's lips and cheeks were crimson. She was beginning to wake up from the potion.
She actually doesn't call for anyone before she takes the potion, she does it in private. The only one who knows that Juliet takes the potion and doesn't actually die is Friar Laurence. She tells the nurse to go and help Mrs. Capulet with organizing the wedding.
Juliet will wake up in the Capulet family tomb, where Romeo and the friar are planning for her to escape to be with him. However, due to a miscommunication, Romeo believes Juliet is dead and ultimately takes his own life.
The potion that Juliet takes in Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" is meant to make her appear dead for 42 hours.