“I'll go no more; I am afraid to think of what I have done. Look not again I dare not.” (Macbeth scene 2 act 2). This is a quote from Macbeth in the play Macbeth. This is Macbeth regretting what he did after killing King Duncan. At the start of the play after he killed King Duncan he was fearful, but at the end of the play, he was not fazed at all because he murdered so many people. Firstly, I want to begin by is that Macbeth was a really acceptable good person. In the beginning, King Duncan claimed he was “a great Thane and a worthy gentleman”(act 1 scene 2). And he was the thane of Cawdor, he had a really high spot in the kingdom. But Lady Macbeth and he wanted more power, so they did the unthinkable. He murdered king Duncan, an amazing king and everyone loved him. Since he was high up in the kingdom he was in line to be the next king. So he did get what he wanted but at a bad cost. …show more content…
No, this my hand will rather the multitudinous seas incarnadine” (Macbeth act 2, scene 2). This quote is stated by Macbeth in Macbeth, this means he is really guilty and all the oceans in the world couldn't even wash the blood from his hands. After he killed King Duncan he went to Lady Macbeth and said “god bless us”(Macbeth act 2 scene 2). This is because he feels really guilty and asks for forgiveness because he committed murder. He also forgets to grab the knife because he was so frightened. These are all the things he did after killing King
The witches tell Macbeth he “shalt be king hereafter” (1.3.53). He then kills off Duncan, fulfilling their prophecy. When Macbeth decides whether or not to kill Duncan his greed gets the best of him and he says“I go, and it is done.” (2.1.75) . He betrays Duncan, a man who he was once loyal to, in order to achieve his goal.
Mason Mattson Mrs. Stephens Soph english 1st hour Macbeth Essay Who Really Is To Blame? In the book “No Fear Macbeth” by Shakespeare.
In Macbeth Act 4 Scene 2 Shakespeare shows three themes within this act with Lady Macduff and Ross her son. (Miller)Miller states about this scene that it is shakespeare's way of reflecting back on the play so far “Lady Macduff's much expanded role and the death she suffers, in contrast to her counterpart in Shakespeare's Macbeth”. The first theme that is showed is flying and it is showed in the first line of the scene by Lady Macduff with her talking to the messenger Ross when he arrives. In the following lines Lady Macduff expresses the second theme which is cowardice when she is talking to Ross the messenger she talks about how Macduff abandoning her and her son, she talks to Ross she calls Macduff a traitor. One of the last themes showed
Lady Macbeth is a loving wife and full of ambition in the play. When Macbeth learns about the three prophecies, he tells Lady Macbeth about them, demonstrating how she fully supports him. Lady Macbeth slowly emerges from her dark ambition as the play progresses. Lady Macbeth begins to become desperate, and she persuades Macbeth to kill the King to fulfill the third prophecy, which calls for Macbeth to take the throne. However, Lady Macbeth further persuades Macbeth by saying, "What cannot you
It shows Macbeth cannot sleep without thinking of the murder he committed. William Shakespeare is showing the guilt and the obsession which will cause Macbeth to go through a hard time throughout the rest of the play. Macbeth shows “No more” as a reference as unsettled peace and how he is never being able to sleep peacefully again. This is symbolized through Macbeth “Hearing a voice” over the murder he committed. He
Lady Macbeth and Macbeth react differently to the death of King Duncan in Act 2 Scene 2. While Macbeth goes through a turmoil of emotions, starting with guilt and remorse; to then horror as he is stricken with his conscience; to dread after he is unable to say ‘Amen.’ Lady Macbeth, however, doesn’t feel guilty for her or her husband’s actions at all, and takes the initiative after Macbeth fails to do so. Macbeth’s first reaction to the murder of King Duncan is remorse, which he expresses by saying “This is a sorry sight.”
He is tormented by the enormity of his crime, and his guilt intensifies as he commits more murders to maintain his newly acquired power. Macbeth's guilt is evident in his soliloquies, where he reflects on the consequences of his actions, such as when he says, "To know my deed, 'twere best not know myself" (Act 2, Scene 2). Macbeth is aware that his guilt is consuming him, and he tries to distance himself from the reality of his actions.
Macbeth continues to get flashbacks from the murder claiming, “Will all great Neptune's ocean wash this blood clean from my hand? No, this my hand will rather the multitudinous seas incarnadine, making the green one red' Macbeth” (Act II, Sc. II). Macbeth Highlights in this part that all the oceans in the world wouldn't be capable of washing the blood from his hands saying he is guilty. Throughout the play, Macbeth continues to see recurring images which not only prove he regrets his actions but in some cases foreshadow the future.
However, when he encounters the witches' prophecy of his future as King of Scotland, ambition takes hold of him. The desire for power engulfs his mind, triggering a chain of events that leads to the murder of King Duncan. Despite his initial resolve, guilt quickly infiltrates Macbeth's conscience as he finds himself tormented by the weight of his crime. Becoming consumed by self-reproach, Macbeth is convinced that no amount of water, no matter how much he washes his hands, can cleanse him of the bloodstains as he exclaims, "Will all great Neptune's ocean wash this blood clean from my hand?" (Act 2, Scene 2, p 83), revealing the depth of his wrongdoing and his desperation to rid himself of its consequences.
Guilt is a feeling of deserving blame for an offense of some nature, causing one to feel self-conscious and doubtful of their own worth. A lack of guilt can cause a person to be overly confident and lack good judgment. In Shakespeare's Macbeth the theme of the characters guilt is successfully expressed through the imagery used to describe the actions and traits of the characters. This allows us to see how their guilt affects the different characters and the way they act. In the play, three types of imagery are used to express the theme of guilt.
Macbeth was the Thane of Cawdor but he wanted to be king more than anything. The witches had told him that he would one day be king but he did not know how long that would take so when King Duncan had been invited to stay the night at his house he exclaimed that “My thought, whose murder yet is but fantastical,/ shakes so my single state of man/ that function is smother 'd in surmise,/ and nothing is but what is not”(1.3.52-55). He felt that if he were to kill King Duncan that he would have a better chance of becoming king. Though the witches had never told him that someone would need to get murdered for him to become king, his ambition tempted him to quicken this process the only way he felt he could. This was the beginning of the murderer that the witches had created with the fortune telling.
In the play Macbeth there was a lot of stuff that went on that could keep the reader interested. One of these things are all of the murders in the play. With all these murders happening, there has to be someone to blame. In the play Lady Macbeth is to blame for the murders because she called evil upon herself, influenced Macbeth to be a murder, and she wanted power.
Often times, people go through rises and downfalls in their lives that they themselves are responsible for. In Shakespeare’s play Macbeth, both main characters, Lady Macbeth and Macbeth, himself, are responsible for the downfall of Macbeth. Lady Macbeth is responsible for the tragedy because she convinces and manipulates Macbeth into doing the deed. However, Shakespeare accomplishes in showing that Macbeth is more responsible for his own downfall than Lady Macbeth because he listens to the witches and follows his ambition rather than his conscience. To begin, Lady Macbeth is responsible for the tragedy because she convinces and manipulates Macbeth into doing the deed by insulting him when he changes his mind.
This direct quote said by Macbeth, shows his selfish ambition and proves that he does not care about anybody other than himself. Macbeth is also stating within this quote that he has walked so far into a river of blood that even if he tried stopping now, it would be easier for him to keep killing people than to become a good person again. Based on his actions, Macbeth has shown that he has quickly transitioned from good to evil and that he does not have any remorse for all the killing that he has done.
Lots of people know about Lady Macbeth, but is she as evil as people think? In the play, Macbeth by William Shakespeare, a very controversial topic is Lady Macbeth being evil or not. In the play, she starts off being a manipulative wife to her husband, as far as to kill the king. But later she kills herself out of guilt when Scotland is in shambles. Lady Macbeth, after much investigating is truly an evil character, as well as manipulative.