Juliet stabbed her self because see took a potion that would make her sleep and when her lover (romeo) found her he thought see was dead so he stabbed himself so that he could be with her in death. but Juliet was still alive and when she woke up and sore that romeo was dead she stabbed herself.
Juliet awoke to find Romeo dead. She drank the last bit of poison from inside the vial but that didn't work so she took Romeo's dagger and stabbed herself in the heart.
This shows how much they loved one another
After Juliet wakes up and sees that Romeo has killed himself, she first tries to swallow the last of the poison in the vial. When that does not work, she stabs herself in the heart.
First her tried to drink the same poisen that Romeo had but the bottle he used was empty. Then she stabed herself with Romeo's dagger.
In Act IV, scene I of Romeo and Juliet, Juliet threatens to stab herself if Friar Lawrence does not help her.
A dagger. If the friar's potion doesn't work, she will stab herself.
act 4.3 is so important because Juliet tells her father when she comes home from friar laurences cell that she agrees to marry Paris and friar Laurence gave her a vial that will make her act and look dead and she thinks sbout alot of thinks like what will happen if the potion doesn't work she would stab herself so she doesn't have to marry Paris .... then finally she drinks the vial
The potion which Juliet was to take was not poison. They were knockout drops, designed to make her look dead long enough to get buried then wake up and be reunited with Romeo. If they didn't work, she was prepared to stab herself to death, as she ultimately did.
In this speech Juliet tells the Friar that she would rather stab herself than go through the bigamous marriage with Paris, and that unless the Friar had some suggestion of how she could avoid it right there and then, she would kill herself. Of course this puts the friar on the spot to come up with a solution. You might think that his plan sounds crazy, and that it would perhaps have been simpler to just have Juliet disguise herself as a nun and head off to Mantua, but he was under a lot of pressure and that was the best he could think of at the time.
Juliet stabs herself in the heart with Romeo's dagger.
In Act IV, scene I of Romeo and Juliet, Juliet threatens to stab herself if Friar Lawrence does not help her.
A dagger. If the friar's potion doesn't work, she will stab herself.
In Act 5 Scene 3 after stabbing herself.
Juliet said, "O happy dagger, This is thy sheath: there rust and let me die."
Offer herself as a freied
act 4.3 is so important because Juliet tells her father when she comes home from friar laurences cell that she agrees to marry Paris and friar Laurence gave her a vial that will make her act and look dead and she thinks sbout alot of thinks like what will happen if the potion doesn't work she would stab herself so she doesn't have to marry Paris .... then finally she drinks the vial
A sword.
an example of dramatic irony in Romeo and Juliet act 3 scene 2 is when Juliet is talking to herself at the beginning of the act. some examples of this are when she says "that runaways' eyes may wink: and, romeo, leap to these arms, untalk'd of and unseen,
One simile in Act 4 of Romeo and Juliet is when Juliet compares herself to "a bark on the sea" being tossed and turned by her emotions. This simile highlights Juliet's feelings of helplessness and instability in the face of her circumstances.
The potion which Juliet was to take was not poison. They were knockout drops, designed to make her look dead long enough to get buried then wake up and be reunited with Romeo. If they didn't work, she was prepared to stab herself to death, as she ultimately did.
Act II