Juliet took Romeo's dagger after he killed himself. Romeo had a dagger because in that time it was appropriate for people to carry around weapons.
"Happy" usually meant "fortunate" or "lucky" in Shakespeare's day. Juliet wants to do herself in, but Romeo has drunk all the poison. Then Juliet finds the dagger: what luck! how fortunate! what a happy coincidence! Hence it is a "happy dagger".
No one takes the dagger away from Romeo: there is nobody there but him, and even if there were, he kills himself with poison, not a dagger. Juliet kills herself with the dagger.
Romeo's Dagger. in the Vault, after finding Romeo Dead beside her.
After she finds Romeo dead from the poison she kills herself: Yea, noise? then I'll be brief. O happy dagger!Snatching ROMEO's dagger This is thy sheath;Stabs herself there rust, and let me die. The noise was the sound of people coming. The dagger, normally in a sheath on Romeo's belt, finds a new sheath, Juliet's body, where it would eventually go rusty.
i think it was a dagger in case the potion didn't work
"O happy dagger" is a line from William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." It is spoken by Juliet as she contemplates using Romeo's dagger to end her own life. The phrase signifies Juliet's desperation and belief that death will bring relief from her woe.
"Happy" usually meant "fortunate" or "lucky" in Shakespeare's day. Juliet wants to do herself in, but Romeo has drunk all the poison. Then Juliet finds the dagger: what luck! how fortunate! what a happy coincidence! Hence it is a "happy dagger".
Romeo kills himself with poison bought from the apothecary and Juliet stabs herself with Romeo's dagger.
of course not she dies stabbing herself with romeo's dagger
she stabbed her self with a dagger
Juliet stabs herself in the heart with Romeo's dagger.
No one takes the dagger away from Romeo: there is nobody there but him, and even if there were, he kills himself with poison, not a dagger. Juliet kills herself with the dagger.
Juliet says "O happy dagger, This is thy sheath: there rust, and let me die" in Act 5, Scene 3, line 171 of William Shakespeare's play "Romeo and Juliet." This line is spoken as Juliet prepares to take her own life with Romeo's dagger after discovering him dead beside her.
She stabs herself with Romeo's dagger.
Dagger
Romeo's Dagger. in the Vault, after finding Romeo Dead beside her.
In the end of the play, Juliet takes Romeo's dagger and thrusts it into her chest.