The theme of death has been portrayed by using different literary techniques. Metaphors, rhetorical questions and imagery have all been used to show her fear of death. ‘I have a faint cold fear thrills through my veins/ That almost freezes up the heat of life’ is a metaphor used in the Juliet’s soliloquy; here she is saying that the fear she has of death is so cold it might kill her. During the soliloquy multiple rhetorical questions have been used to show that Juliet doubts the plan. Juliet asks all of these questions of herself and it gives the idea and evidence that she is worried about the future and her death. She is concerned about marrying Paris as she is already married to Romeo. ‘What if this mixture does not work at all? Shall I be married then tomorrow morning?’ Violent imagery is used throughout the ending of the soliloquy violent imagery is used and this is further reinforcing the idea that Juliet is scared of death and how she is slowing going insane. ‘And, in this rage, with some great kinsman’s bone, As with a club, dash out my desperate brains?’ Juliet reinforcing the idea of death by saying that if the poison does not work and if she is trapped inside the tomb she might go crazy with grief and kill herself.
The original play of Romeo and Juliet written by William Shakespeare, being one of the most recognised pieces of literature to be created worldwide, invokes many emotions in the audience. Shakespeare is able to do this through his use of literary techniques which comprise of metaphors, personification, rhetorical questions and imagery to show the themes of love and