Life is a journey where the ultimate destination is death and while that it seems that individuals are in control of everything else, they are not. Macbeth is a tragic story where Macbeth was doomed to fail .
Life is out of many people’s control. Life is propelled forward by time, fate and mental capacity leaving an individual at their mercy which was exhibited by Macbeth and the speaker in the “Rhapsody on a Windy night”. ( either lead in about life being out of a person’s control or reword thesis ) ( Both individuals realize that time is moving on ) . Macbeth’s world comes crashing down when he hears of Lady Macbeth’s death and realizes the one thing he does not have is time. Macbeth is surrounded by an army while his wife passed away and he is vulnerable as he cannot do anything as everything hit him at once. As Macbeth delivers his soliloquy there is a heavy tone as he starts “Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow” ( Shakespeare V.V.19 ). The repetition signifies the emptiness he feels and presents the idea that each new day is just like the previous one and nothing will change as time moves forward. The tone of the soliloquy can be interpreted as exhausted because Macbeth has acknowledged that time does not wait for anyone. It keeps moving at a constant rate which produces the image of the soldiers marching towards him when Macbeth was in his castle and life marching forward in a “petty pace” ( Shakespeare V.V. 20 ), making it barely noticeable. This idea of time
This personification of unemotional time is best seen when Macbeth laments, “Life...struts and frets..and then is heard no more,” (5.5.24-26). This quote is essentially describing how time can occasionally make an appearance when it is most opportune, and then lose interest and cease to support those who require it. This abandonment, when it is required, is a prominent example of how time is insensitive. As the audience at this time primarily consisted of devout Christians, many would have ascribed to a concept of heaven, which was, by most, viewed as a type of utopia after death. This would have prompted the audience to perceive Macbeth’s weary tone.
The question “ How much of what happens in our lives do we actually control?” is present throughout the story Macbeth, written by William Shakespeare, and the story of Chris McCandless, named Into the Wild. Both stories demonstrate this theme through the choices the main characters make in their lives, Macbeth was told his prophecy from the witches, which set him on his path towards his chosen destiny. In the case of Chris McCandless, he chose to live a very minimal life, which to led the camping trip that caused his death. The choices that these two people made answer the question of “How much in our lives do we actually control?”.
English Essay, Macbeth Shakespeare’s extensive use of symbols throughout Macbeth (1606) provides us with deeper understandings of the characters within the play. ‘The choices we make determine our destiny’ is the driving quote for this essay and is an ongoing motif throughout the play Macbeth. This quote signifies that the decisions you make within your everyday life will determine the outcome of your future and destiny. The releletivity of this quote can relate to every character in this play but the most relevent example of this saying would be the tragic hero of the story Macbeth and his partener Lady Macbeth.
Sean Smith Mrs. Anthony Senior English 8 March 2018 The Danger of Ambition In Shakespeare’s “The Tragedy of Macbeth”, the author proposes a perpetual loop of struggle through his use of fate and imagery of the character’s deaths in order to express the consequences for one’s actions if they are foolish enough to make these decisions. “The Tragedy of Macbeth” is a uniquely portrayed concept of fate, internal struggle, and paradox; the story depicts a human with intentions to receive power.
Macbeth Essay In the play Macbeth, by William Shakespeare, Macbeth is always being overcome by fear, ignorance, and greed causing his actions to be controlled by them in many different ways. He is also affected in many other ways such as his the decisions he makes and how he acts towards others. Macbeth’s actions are being controlled by the emotions of greed, Ignorance, and Fear.
As soon as Macbeth becomes than he realizes that if everything is going to be decided by fate he is just going to wait for it to happen. Shortly after he becomes very impatient saying “The Prince of Cumberland! That is a step/ On which I must fall down or else o’erleap,/ For in my way it lies. 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.”
“Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow” (Act 5. Scene 5. Line 19). Shakespeare utilizes the element to allude that life is repetitive and continues hopelessly. Macbeth at this point is more likely to distance his efforts into being king away from the future that awaits him.
59 - 60). By this, Lady Macbeth is saying that once King Duncan enters the Macbeth estate, he will never step out again as he will be dead before the Sun rises. At this point of the play, the audience is fully aware of Lady Macbeth’s ambitious and ruthless behavior by the way she speaks, and therefore has cemented the death of the King in their mind.
Lady Macbeth has shifted away from the nihilism that she had possessed before as she is now consumed with guilt over her actions. Later after Lady Macbeth’s death. Macbeth realizes that for them there is no long lasting fulfillment in life as he has no heir and has not accomplished anything that would allow him to leave a legacy. Even though Macbeth knows that there is no point in his actions. He realizes that his power is inevitably going to be lost.
Macbeth’s soliloquy in Act 5 Scene 5 may be Shakespeare’s way of telling the audience that no matter how we choose to live our destiny, fate could not be changed and nothing would matter in the end. Macbeth says “Tomorrow, and tomorrow and tomorrow/ Creeps in this petty pace from day to day/ To the last syllable of recorded time” (Act 5 Scene 5 lines 19-21) and “All our yesterdays have lighted fools/ The way to dusty death” (Act 5 Scene 5 lines 22-23). The imagery of all the “tomorrows” and “yesterdays” in the soliloquy tells the audience that we should not pursue our own desires without recognizing our insignificance and triviality. The soliloquy writes “to the last syllable of recorded time;/ And all our yesterdays have lighted fools/ The way to dusty death” (Act 5 Scene 5 lines 21-23), meaning the past acts as a guide on the path to death. It implies that since time is displaced into “broken syllables” and the past is disconnected into fragments.
How Much of Life can we Control Some people believe that they can take control of their lives and and create their own destiny, while others believe there is a natural force that decides what our destiny will be. In the texts Macbeth and The Iraq War Blog, authors Shakespeare and Faiza Al-Alajir present the theme of not having control over one's destiny, through tragedy and history. The author of Macbeth, Shakespeare believes that people do not have total control in their lives.
The personality of Macbeth changes over the course of the play as Macbeth murders many innocent people like, Duncan, Banquo and Macduff's family. The death of these characters symbolizes the death and birth of something inside Macbeth and the beginning of his downfall. Macbeth, at the beginning or the play, a brave soldier only protecting his people and his king, to Macbeth a murderous tyrant only looking out for the greater good of himself. The death of Duncan symbolized the death of Macbeth's before anxious and confused self and birthed a Macbeth full of guilt and anxiety. After being led to Duncan by a floating dagger and murdering him, Macbeth returns to his wife crying, "One cried "God Bless us!"
The application of alliteration in this line emphasizes the way in which time marches on the same way everyday, expounding on the notion that living is a monotonous repetition of the same things forever. This establishes a grave tone that reflects the despondency of reality, as life being a boring repeat of itself that continues into eternity is a thought that contrasts with the audiences ideas that life has an innate meaning. Moreover, Macbeth further explicates his views, declaring life as “a poor player” on a stage who disappears after a gaudy hour of performance (5.5.24-26). The emphasis brought on by the alliteration in this line conveys the worthlessness and insignificance of the actor, who creates illusions through dramatization but is ultimately forgotten. This elicits a melancholy tone in that living is painted as being unimportant and, although providing the illusion of meaning, is disregarded once it comes to a conclusion, conveying to the audience that that their actions have no significance.
This line shows one of Macbeth’s pride and how his false notion on the interpretation of the prophecy lead him to his downfall which is where we can sympathize with
Shakespeare uses structure, personification and foreshadowing to make the soliloquy important and mysterious. Macbeth 's speech is structured in a progressing way showing the development of his feelings. from the point where he has mixed feelings to the point where he is keen on what he has to do. The first seven lines introduce three different questions that Macbeth asks in lines 34, 37 and 39.