Holly Barkeley Mrs. Erlanger English 4 19 October 2012 Macbeth Journals Metaphor: “Out‚ out brief candle” (V‚ v‚ 3) In this scene of the play‚ Macbeth is responding to the news of Lady Macbeth’s suicide. He is comparing the light of the candle to the life of lady Macbeth that has been shortened. Now we can see that the candle’s flame has become a metaphor for her short life and sudden death. This is a very useful tactic that Shakespeare used in the play because it allowed the reader to not
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No one is born a monster. They are created by the evil acts of envious people. Medusa began a victim just like any other monster. She was punished by Athena for getting raped by Poseidon. She was transformed into a horrifying creature with cracked and scaly skin‚ venomous snakes for hair and worst of all; anyone who looks into her eyes is turned into stone. As a result‚ it prohibited her from coming close to any kind of human contact. Medusa is one of the biggest monsters ever told‚ she was born
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opposing forces that moves a plot forward. The Tragedy of Macbeth has many conflicts. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth is part of an external conflict. The example of the extexternal conflict is the quote “Are you a man? This is the air drawn dagger which you said led you to Duncan”. (pg. 347 line 59) This means he was having second doubts about killing King Duncan‚ so Lady Macbeth tried to be little and manipulate Macbeth into killing King Duncan. Lady Macbeth you can say was ambitious too. Because she wanted to
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There are many different viewpoints as to who was the real driving force behind Macbeth and his ascent to power. There is the possibility of outside forces‚ including Lady Macbeth and the witches but also he could be victim to inner desires and ambitions which is the human condition which he could not control. The contrasting viewpoint is that Macbeth is the villain and that he chose to kill Duncan without much persuasion from any outer forces. It was his choice and he made it in a clear mind with
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Courtney Thebodo Macbeth Macbeth’s flaws lead to corruption and the disturbance of fate In the era of Macbeth‚ many of the beliefs were based upon fate. It was a major part of the culture and how everything happens for a reason. In this play by Shakespeare‚ fate is corrupted by the main character Macbeth; this corruption unbalances the universe. Macbeth provides an example of contradicting the beliefs in this time frame‚ eventually fate restores the kingdom and the universe balances out. “Tragedy
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King Submitted by Nohely Cuevas English 10 Mrs. McMillan 10/22/14 In the play Macbeth‚ ambition‚ strength‚ and insanity play major roles in how the characters Macbeth and Lady Macbeth behave and react. People change over the time and as you ready the play some character will change but some are not. The destruction wrought when ambition goes unchecked by moral constraints. Lady Macbeth is portrayed as being monstrously evil in the first three acts of the play. When her character
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different people. As soon as his creature comes to life and opens eyes “all Victor feels is disgust and horror for the horrendous monster he has created. Victor cannot bear the sight of his creature.” He rejects his creation because of its deformity and abandons it calling the creature a “monster”. Contrary to the prevalent characterization of the creature as a monster‚ in my opinion‚ Frankenstein’s creation was a kind‚ compassionate and benevolent creature that was misunderstood and wrongly judged
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com/homework-help/how-does-lady-macbeth-describe-her-husband-277319 2 需要找 3 Note the double meaning of "done" in this line: in the first instance it means "finished‚" in the second "performed." Macbeth’s meaning‚ which he goes on to illustrate through the next seven lines‚ is that if the whole matter could be settled by one blow‚ it would be well to strike that blow quickly. http://www.markedbyteachers.com/university-degree/linguistics-classics-and-related-subjects/analysis-of-macbeth-s-soliloquy-act-1-scene-7
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or cursed life. Macbeth‚ after killing King Duncan‚ can hardly sleep because of his ghastly nightmares. While the witches are talking‚ Macbeth and Banquo enter the area. Macbeth proclaims that he has never seen a day "so fair and foul." (Act 1‚ Scene 3‚ Line 38) This is reminiscent of the weird sisters’ statement in Act 1‚ Scene 1 that "fair is foul and foul is fair." This is a prominent theme in the play‚ as it beautifully expresses the macabre state of affairs within Macbeth and without. Banquo
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presented in William Shakespeare’s play Macbeth; fear is a distressing emotion aroused by impending danger‚ evil‚ or pain. Fear: the motivation for an individual carry out actions whether they are right or wrong. In the tragic play‚ Macbeth‚ the axis of the play was the notion of fear being set upon in the characters minds that influenced their destinies. This can be proved by the subsequent murders that followed after King Duncan’s. Likewise‚ Lady Macbeth constantly washes her hands‚ sleepwalks
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