Act 1 Scene 1 Original Text | Modern Text | CORNWALLGet horses for your mistress. | CORNWALLPrepare the horses for your lady. | Exit OSWALD | OSWALD exits. | GONERILFarewell‚ sweet lord‚ and sister. | GONERILGoodbye‚ my sweet lord.—Goodbye‚ my sister. | CORNWALLEdmund‚ farewell. | CORNWALLGoodbye‚ Edmund. | Exeunt GONERIL and EDMUND the bastard | GONERIL and EDMUND exit. | Go seek the traitor Gloucester.Pinion him like a thief‚ bring him before us. | Go find the traitor Gloucester.
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The opening scene in Hamlet Act I‚ Scene I‚ sets the tone for the story. The story begins with two soldiers (Bernardo and Francisco) on guard meeting in the darkness. Both soldiers are on edge and seem fearful‚ which leads the reader to believe that the characters are under a state of stress. The author uses imagery to present the main symbol of fear in the opening act‚ by presenting a ghost. The ghost of King Hamlet represents the fear and tragedy of the unknown shift of power following his death
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Act 1 scene 3 The supernatural atmosphere of scene one is recreated by the witches’ description of their evil doings and by their charm. Their power is limited; they cannot kill the sailor but they can make his ship meet terrifying storms‚ and the poor man’s life a hell on earth. This foreshadows the outcome of the witches’ influence on Macbeth. He too will‚ for example‚ deprived of sleep. The limitation of their powers is an important fact to keep in mind. Macbeth’s first words echo those
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Scene 1: Jonas lives in a dystopia Jonas is the main character in The Giver by Lois Lowry. In Jonas’s community it’s natural to be doing everything the loudspeaker says‚ it is the way to surrvive. Only Jonas and the Giver can see in color. Everyone in Jonas’s community thinks it is natrual that the leaders can listen to every conversation. All adults have to apply for a spouse and children. Which means you get assigned to a family unit. Not very many people are even aware there is much life
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The beginning scenes are important to the play‚ because these scenes are the exposition of the play and help the audience to make meaning. In the beginning scene of the play‚ the stage is set out to make the Munday Family household appear as poor‚ which evident through timeframe‚ which is 1929‚ which was the peak of the great depression‚ Government Well Aboriginal Reserve‚ Northam‚ Morning‚ 1929‚ and on the setting members of the Munday family are playing cricket with homemade equipment‚ DAVID and
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Essay Questions on William Shakespeare’s Macbeth 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) 6) 7) 8) 9) 10) 11) 12) 13) 14) 15) 16) 17) 18) 19) 20) 21) 22) 23) 24) 25) Discuss the various roles of the witches in ‘Macbeth’ with special emphasis on Coleridge’s remark that “the witches have the power of tempting those that have been tempters themselves.” What is‚ at the end of the play‚ your attitude to Macbeth? Admiration‚ sympathy‚ disgust‚ or any other attitude? Justify your view by referring to scenes or extracts
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#6. Act 2‚ Scenes 1 and 2. Cite specific textual evidence to support your answers to each of the following: A) Romeo and Juliet fall in love and he want to talk with Juliet. So he climbs over the wall. Mercutio and Benvolio think his love is blind. Line 32 and line 33. B) It describes that Julie walk to the window. For example‚ her eyes are shinning like the stars. C) Because Juliet is the sun and she is out shining the moon. D) "A rose by any other name would smell as sweet" that mean a name doesn’t
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Shoshana Ginsbury Act Four Scene One: Explore the significance of this extract in relation to the tragedy of the play as a whole This extract is from Act Four‚ Scene One of William Shakespeare’s tragic play‚ Othello. In terms of the five-act tragic structure‚ it is part of the fourth act- the ‘falling action’‚ during which the conflict of the play unravels‚ and the direction of the ending is made clear. In this extract‚ an arguable turning point is reached when Othello slaps Desdemona‚ and his hatred
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Commentary: Macbeth‚ Act II‚ Scene I “Is this a dagger which I see before me…” Macbeth is one of the most famous plays written by William Shakespeare. The play tells the story of Macbeth‚ Thane of Glamis whose dark ambition will lead him to murder the king and take his crown. This passage is Macbeth’s first soliloquy extracted from the Scene I of Act II‚ also known as the “dagger scene”. This is the scene that precedes Duncan’s murder. Many themes are recurring throughout the play and this
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particularly the second one‚ are difficult to get through because the words are not arranged the way English is spoken now‚ so they do not naturally flow. After practicing them often‚ the words felt less clunky over time. Something else I realized the longer I looked over the scene my group used‚ is how cruel the trick on Malvolio really is. It was easy
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