Juliet was just asleep because of a potion that Friar Lawrence gave her, but she looked to everyone else to be dead. She took the potion the night before she was to marry Paris and she continued to look dead for another 42 hours.
The Capulets had a family tomb, which is where Juliet was buried.
Capulet family tomb
The Capulet Tomb.
FamilyTomb
Friar Lawrence gave Juliet a potion that would put Juliet into a coma-like sleep for about two days straight. Everybody would think she was dead. Juliet's relatives would put her in a cellar (their family morgue) and Romeo and himself would be there waiting for her to wake up. Then Romeo and Juliet could live together in Mantua.
The Friar gives Juliet a potion which gives her all the signs of death, no pulse, cold skin, slowed breath, which she takes making her family believe that she is dead. She is put in the Capulet family tomb, and Friar John was asked to deliver news of Juliet being alive to Romeo, so Romeo can come just as Juliet wakes up and whisk her off to Mantua with him. At least that was the friar's plan. Unfortunately Friar John gets caught up in traffic so to speak, so when Romeo hears that Juliet is dead, he immediately heads for the tomb, arriving while she still sleeps, and kills himself. She wakes up, finds him dead, and kills herself also.
In William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, Romeo believes that Banishment is worse than death because he cannot bear the thought of living knowing that he will never see Juliet again. If he were dead, at least Romeo would not have to think about Juliet all of the time. Living and knowing that he was not allowed to see Juliet was the worst thing that Romeo could imagine.
Balthasar brings Romeo the tidings of Juliet's death, telling his master that he saw her laid in Capel's monument.
Romeo committed suicide at the end of Romeo and Juliet. He thought Juliet was dead when in fact she was just put to sleep. So not willing to live without her he killed himself with poison. When Juliet woke up and found Romeo dead, she killed herself.
Capulet family tomb
Bury it. It's what you do with corpses.
Friar Lawrence gave Juliet a potion that would put Juliet into a coma-like sleep for about two days straight. Everybody would think she was dead. Juliet's relatives would put her in a cellar (their family morgue) and Romeo and himself would be there waiting for her to wake up. Then Romeo and Juliet could live together in Mantua.
Friar Lawrance's plan for Juliet is that he will give her a drug that is supposed to put her in a death- like slumber for 24 hours so her family will think she is dead and he will send a letter to Romeo telling him that Juliet is waiting for him.
Friar Lawrence gave Juliet a potion that would put Juliet into a coma-like sleep for about two days straight. Everybody would think she was dead. Juliet's relatives would put her in a cellar (their family morgue) and Romeo and himself would be there waiting for her to wake up. Then Romeo and Juliet could live together in Mantua.
On a slab in the family tomb. Fortunately they did not have embalmers.
The Friar gives Juliet a potion which gives her all the signs of death, no pulse, cold skin, slowed breath, which she takes making her family believe that she is dead. She is put in the Capulet family tomb, and Friar John was asked to deliver news of Juliet being alive to Romeo, so Romeo can come just as Juliet wakes up and whisk her off to Mantua with him. At least that was the friar's plan. Unfortunately Friar John gets caught up in traffic so to speak, so when Romeo hears that Juliet is dead, he immediately heads for the tomb, arriving while she still sleeps, and kills himself. She wakes up, finds him dead, and kills herself also.
The nurse may be putting Juliet off because she is trying to protect her from potential harm or because she is hesitant to reveal sensitive information. She could also be feeling torn between her loyalty to Juliet and her obligations to Juliet's family.
In William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, Romeo believes that Banishment is worse than death because he cannot bear the thought of living knowing that he will never see Juliet again. If he were dead, at least Romeo would not have to think about Juliet all of the time. Living and knowing that he was not allowed to see Juliet was the worst thing that Romeo could imagine.
Romeo learns of Juliet's death through a message sent by Friar Laurence. The friar's letter detailing Juliet's fake death arrives after Romeo has been banished from Verona. Romeo does not receive the full information, leading to tragic consequences.
Balthasar brings Romeo the tidings of Juliet's death, telling his master that he saw her laid in Capel's monument.
Romeo committed suicide at the end of Romeo and Juliet. He thought Juliet was dead when in fact she was just put to sleep. So not willing to live without her he killed himself with poison. When Juliet woke up and found Romeo dead, she killed herself.