Juliet immediately conks out and appears to be totally dead. Her pulse, breathing and respiration stop and her skin becomes white and cold. This lasts for 42 hours when she suddenly starts looking alive again (as Romeo notices in the crypt).
He says it's like ecstasy. A constant high. Small chance of dying, but Juliet's mad addiction to drugs didn't stop her from taking the "potion". Pretty much anything friar lawrence did was secretly associated with drugs.
As he picked the "herbs" and placed them in a basket. That was his code for Marijuana.
The night before her planned wedding to Paris.
Juliet worries that Friar Lawrence's sleeping potion is actually a poison.
Juliet never doubts that Romeo will come for her. She does have doubt about Friar Lawrence and that he might have changed the potion to poison.
Juliet says, "Romeo, I come! This do I drink to thee!" and she drinks Friar Lawrence's potion.
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.
Something made of a certain flower does. Anyonekonw what flower it was?
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'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.
Romeo finds Juliet's body in her bedroom after she has taken a potion that makes her appear dead.
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.
Juliet taking the potion provided by Friar Lawrence results in her appearing dead, causing distress among her loved ones. It is not an effect of her taking the potion that it causes her to physically harm herself or others.
Friar Lawrence prepares the potion for Juliet in William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet."
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.
The plant root used in Friar Lawrence's sleeping potion is called mandrake root. It is a poisonous plant with a long history in folklore and mythology and is often associated with magical and mystical properties. In Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet," Friar Lawrence uses mandrake root in the potion that puts Juliet into a deep sleep to feign her death.
Food, as in carrots, potatoes, pork and otherwise cannot be given potion effects. Moreover, potions do not as of yet have a hunger filling quality.
Juliet's sleeping potion in Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet" lasts for 42 hours. She takes it to feign death and is found by Romeo, who believes her to be truly dead. This tragic misunderstanding leads to the eventual demise of both lovers.
A potion cooked up by Friar Lawrence.
Juliet worries that Friar Lawrence's sleeping potion is actually a poison.