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How Does Shakespeare Reveal Macbeth

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How Does Shakespeare Reveal Macbeth
Shakespeare unfolds the play with the witches to reveal how the witches will affect the characters and foreshadows of whats to come. He does not reveal Macbeth first because he allows the readers to gain a better insight of Macbeth’s true personality. When Macbeth is revealed to the readers, he is praised by Duncan for his loyalty and service to him and Macbeth returns the admiration. Before he exits, Macbeth mutters to himself that he must hide his true face to be able to kill Duncan. “Stars, hide your fires;/Let not light see my black and deep desires./The eye wink at the hand, yet let that be/Which the eye fears, when it is done,to see” (1.4.56-60). This displays how Shakespeare exploits the character in a way to the readers that Macbeth has two natures that will later affect his actions.
After winning the battle, Macbeth calls the day “foul and fair” which leads us back to when the witches first said “foul is fair”. This statement means that appearances can be misleading, “Fair” or honest is actually “foul” or evil. “So foul and fair a day I have not seen.” (1.3.39). In this scene, Macbeth had returned from a (1) rigorous battle after losing some of his men (foul) and had gained victory from the battle (fair). A situation can be both foul and fair
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She persuades him to be a heart warming host as Duncan arrives to the party but underneath he must be a callous villain. In order for him to kill Duncan, he must commit with his plan and cannot back down. “Look like the time./Bear welcome in your eye,/Your hand, your tongue. Look like th’ innocent/flower,/But be the serpent under ’t” (1.6.75-88). Lady Macbeth advises Macbeth that he must look happy to fool the people and steer them away from his devious scheme of killing their king. After influencing Macbeth how to look when Duncan comes, Lady Macbeth advises for them to reproach the plan after Duncan

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