 Studying Romeo and Juliet. Here's how you can analyse that for scene 3. The scene opens in Juliet's bedroom. She turns to the nurse and asks her to be left alone for the night. Lady Capulet comes in and asks Juliet a series of questions. We can see that she's really excited to help Juliet prepare for her wedding. However Juliet doesn't share this excitement. Juliet speaks using alliteration to ask her mother if she can be left to spend the night alone in peace. The stage direction shows that both Lady Capulet, Juliet's mother and the nurse leave her to herself. Completely alone in her bedroom we can see that Juliet is very nervous. She speaks in this islametry sentence as well as this iambic pentameter to show that she's scared of taking this potion. Juliet looks at the potion and asks this rhetorical question basically wondering what happens if it doesn't work and it backfires. We can see for the first time that Juliet is really terrified about taking the potion. She wonders if this potion might be actual poison that the Friars used to kill her because the Friar wants to cover up his action of marrying her off to Romeo. Juliet speaks using alliteration to reassure herself that Friar Lawrence does not have any bad intentions for her. Juliet's mind is filled with doubts and she asks this rhetorical question. In other words she's wondering what will happen to her if she wakes up in the Capulet tomb before Romeo comes to fetch her. She seems really terrified about this. She then speaks using this metaphor to state that if she were to wake up in the graveyard she would literally see Tybalt's body which is still fresh from dying so recently. However she ultimately decides to drink this potion. She drinks it in the hope that she'll fall asleep and Romeo will wake her up and they will run away to Mantua.