Before, Macbeth feared judgement when he will eventually die, yet in this scene he is essentially playing God as he is bringing the unjust death of the king, showing a kind of sadistic irony. His megalomaniac attribute is really highlighted during his soliloquy, and when he tells Duncan a knell will ‘summon thee to heaven or hell’ it’s almost as if Macbeth is deciding where Duncan is going to go, a job not meant for mortal men. The verb ‘summon’ points out how he is inviting evil and the supernatural. This would cause an Elizabethan audience to respond with hatred as he is acting in a disrespectful and sinful manner. The readers would have seen the supernatural to be directly related to immorality and suffering, and as he is encouraging it, they would think it can only lead to disaster and tragedy. This links to how Macbeth has changed, he no longer has a moral compass and holds too much certainty in his vile
Before, Macbeth feared judgement when he will eventually die, yet in this scene he is essentially playing God as he is bringing the unjust death of the king, showing a kind of sadistic irony. His megalomaniac attribute is really highlighted during his soliloquy, and when he tells Duncan a knell will ‘summon thee to heaven or hell’ it’s almost as if Macbeth is deciding where Duncan is going to go, a job not meant for mortal men. The verb ‘summon’ points out how he is inviting evil and the supernatural. This would cause an Elizabethan audience to respond with hatred as he is acting in a disrespectful and sinful manner. The readers would have seen the supernatural to be directly related to immorality and suffering, and as he is encouraging it, they would think it can only lead to disaster and tragedy. This links to how Macbeth has changed, he no longer has a moral compass and holds too much certainty in his vile