Macbeth talks to Banquo’s Ghost at the banquet as if everyone in the room can see him. He begs the guests to “see there. Behold, look!” (3.4.82-83) at Banquo in the room. He speaks to the ghost commanding Banquo to “Avaunt, and quit [his] sight! Let the earth hide [him]” (3.4.13). Desperately attempting to send the ghost away, Macbeth bridges reality and illusion and cannot discern between the two. The Third Character, Lady Macbeth, also uses equivocation to develop the theme of appearance versus reality. She tells Macbeth to “look like th’ innocent flower, but be the serpent under’t” (1.6.76-78). Lady Macbeth wants her husband to fake an innocent appearance but in reality be a cunning like a snake. Preparing for the murder of Duncan, Lady Macbeth feigns hospitality and kindness while secretly urging her husband to murder Duncan. In conclusion, through the Witches, Macbeth, and Lady Macbeth, Shakespeare shows that equivocation, deliberate use of confusing and ambiguous words to mislead, are essential to the development of the theme of appearances versus reality. Macbeth becomes entangled in these equivocations that ultimately make him crazy as he tries to separate reality and the
Macbeth talks to Banquo’s Ghost at the banquet as if everyone in the room can see him. He begs the guests to “see there. Behold, look!” (3.4.82-83) at Banquo in the room. He speaks to the ghost commanding Banquo to “Avaunt, and quit [his] sight! Let the earth hide [him]” (3.4.13). Desperately attempting to send the ghost away, Macbeth bridges reality and illusion and cannot discern between the two. The Third Character, Lady Macbeth, also uses equivocation to develop the theme of appearance versus reality. She tells Macbeth to “look like th’ innocent flower, but be the serpent under’t” (1.6.76-78). Lady Macbeth wants her husband to fake an innocent appearance but in reality be a cunning like a snake. Preparing for the murder of Duncan, Lady Macbeth feigns hospitality and kindness while secretly urging her husband to murder Duncan. In conclusion, through the Witches, Macbeth, and Lady Macbeth, Shakespeare shows that equivocation, deliberate use of confusing and ambiguous words to mislead, are essential to the development of the theme of appearances versus reality. Macbeth becomes entangled in these equivocations that ultimately make him crazy as he tries to separate reality and the