Essays About Macbeth
Can corruption of the innocent can lead to the unwanted destruction caused by the individual that was once innocent? It is evident in books such as Macbeth, Frankenstein, Wuthering Heights, Brave New World, and Lord of the Flies. Each one has examples some better than others but all of them once had an innocence that got ripped from their bare hands all while they still thought they had it making confusion for those around them.
So in all reality are we innocent or are we the monsters we fear that take our innocence. Some examples from Macbeth are âThis supernatural soliciting Cannot be ill, cannot be good. If ill, Why hath it given me earnest of success, Commencing in a truth? I am Thane of Cawdor. If good, why do I yield to that suggestion Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair And make my seated heart knock at my ribs, Against the use of nature? Present fears Are less than horrible imaginings. My thought, whose murder yet is but fantastical, Shakes so my single state of man That function is smothered in surmise, And nothing is but what is not.â (Shakespeare, 1.3.134-145) This is when Macbeth first imagines killing King Duncan and it shakes him to his core. It shows that even to a survivor of the battlefield that his mind is innocent of things like this such as cold-blooded murder. Another innocent moment in Macbeth could be â I am settled, and bend up Each corporal agent to this terrible feat. Away, and mock the time with fairest show. False face must hide what the false heart doth knowâ (Shakespeare, 1.3.79-82). This is when he decides to fully go with his plans and when he completely loses his innocence. As the story goes on he orders more and more people murdered. As time goes on the man that has been shaken to the core just by thinking about murder becomes a calculated murderer trying to keep his position on top.
So do we ourselves become the thing we were fighting so hard against all because someone told us something that shaped us in a way they never imagined? Some examples from Frankenstein are in chapter one âThe innocent and helpless creature bestowed on them by heaven, whom to bring up to good, and whose future lot it was in their hands to direct to happiness or misery, according to as they fulfilled their duties towards meâ (1, Shelly) This goes to show that Victor believes that the way you turn out is based on how you are raised. This goes to a theme are childhood and innocence intertwined? In this book, it seems so especially when the monster says this ‘Frankenstein! you belong then to my enemy–to him towards whom I have sworn eternal revenge; you shall be my first victim.'(16, Shelly) That William who the monster killed was portrayed as innocent. His innocence in his murder helped drive Victor into disappearing when he realized that he was the person who unleashed this monster upon this world and only he could possibly kill it or neutralize the threat. This was all brought about by his innocence in the subject he was studying and what he was doing. Did he realize what he was doing for if he did he would have surely thought about it and what would happen if the monster remembered he created him?
So, in the end, are we the monsters we create or are monsters created by us? An answer to that type of question can be answered in Wuthering Heights. Some examples from Wuthering Heights are âCome in! come in! he sobbed. Cathy, do come. Oh, do once more! Oh! My heart’s darling, hear me this time Catherine, at last!â (3, Bronte) This just goes to show what the loss of childhood innocence to soon can lead to people throwing their lives away for the wrong person or for the wrong things. When they throw their life away they can become bitter old people who don’t know how to let go of the past just like Heathcliff except in a way he still held onto his innocence in part due to his hope of Catherine and what she would do for her when he came back. Another example is âShe was much too fond of Heathcliff. The greatest punishment we could invent for her was to keep her separate from him: yet she got chided more than any of us on his accountâ (5, Bronte) This just goes to show that contrary to the truth she does go on to love another man but never as much as Heathcliff and when he comes back it breaks her heart that she did not wait on him. It also ends up killing her since Catherine was childish and that she had to have what she wanted and right then as well. Unlike her daughter who outgrew her childhood innocence, she grew to care for more than just herself. Catherine never did and it ended up destroying her and Heathcliff both since they could never lose their âinnocence of childhoodâ. Through this it allowed hatred to swell and destroy what little humanity they had in them effectively destroying their souls and since they never lost the childish ways they had so they completely ruined generations of all of the families involved simply because they didn’t get their way. Could this just be childhood foolishness or does innocence come with childhood?
So with Heathcliff and Catherine, they were childhood sweetheart with innocence from the beginning but what happens in a world where there is no such thing as innocence. For example the Brave New World. Some examples in Brave New World are in chapter five âDo you know what that switchback was? he said. It was some human being finally and definitely disappearing. Going up in a squirt of hot gas. It would be curious to know who it was a man or a woman, an Alpha or an Epsilon. He sighed. Then, in a resolutely cheerful voice, Anyhow, he concluded, thereâs one thing we can be certain of; whoever he may have been, he was happy when he was alive. Everybodyâs happy now. Yes, everybodyâs happy now, echoed Leninaâ (5,Huxley) This just shows how shallow the people are in this world and they mistake it for innocence. It also shows that anyone who has or shows any signs of disgust in this worlds false innocence they are immediately known to have something wrong with them. They might even say something entirely false about the person just to ruin their reputation especially if they hold any sway in the world. Some other examples in this book is â âI know you donât. And thatâs why we went to bed together yesterday-like infants-instead of being adults and waiting. But it was fun, Lenina insisted. Wasnât it? Oh, the greatest fun, he answered, but in a voice so mournful, with an expression so profoundly miserable, that Lenina felt all her triumph suddenly evaporate. Perhaps he had found her too plump, after all. I told you so, was all that Fanny said, when Lenina came and made her confidences. Itâs the alcohol they put in his surrogateâ(6,Huxley) This also shows that the innocence they think they have from a young age is very different from the savage reservation and almost inconceivable from our worldviews today. It also shows that the people in this world who never knew what innocence is are the shallowest people who believe anything and everything told to them by others that are also respected in their respective classes. This just goes to show that in that world they are never taught or know anything about innocence and the people who branch out and try to think about the world around them are often cast out by the society because they disrupt the world around them asking questions that the answers will cause distention and division.
So in Brave New World the people never know about innocence but with this book, they all knew it and what happened to them ripped it from there hands like candy from a toddler. Some examples from Lord of the Flies are in chapter two â You got your fire alright ⊠the boys were falling still and silent, felling the beginning of awe at the power set free below themâ(2, Golding) This is after the boys burnt down half the island the first time. It shows that they realize the power they have in this world and that no one is going to punish them for any mistakes they may make. Could it be a loss of innocence? Acting without fear of punishment could be called that. Another example from Lotf is â Then, amid the roar of bees in the afternoon sunlight, Simon found for the littluns the fruit they could not reach, pulled off the choicest from up in the foliage, passed them back down to the endless, outstretched handsâ (3, Golding). This shows the Christ figure Simon helping the masses aka the littluns all while the savagery going on behind them with the grown folk aka the higher classes in the world. This shows that although the higher classes may actually care about the masses they always want to keep their heads above the water as well. This also shows the difference between Simon picking the fruit for the littluns and then Jack killing the boar savagely.
Are we born innocent or do we ever even have innocence in this world? Some examples from Hamlet âMy lord, I think I saw him yesternight./ Saw, who? /My lord, the King your father. /The King my father?â (Shakespeare,1.2.189-192) This shows the first time he was told of his father’s ghost ripping his innocence from him and threw him into the world of ghost, lies, and death. âIt is here, Hamlet. Hamlet, thou art slain. No medicine in the world can do thee good; In thee there is not half an hourâs life. The treacherous instrument is in thy hand, Unbated and envenomed. The foul practice Hath turnâd itself on me. Lo here I lie, Never to rise again. Thy motherâs poisoned. I can no more the King, the Kingâs to blame.â (Shakespeare, 5.2.306-313) This ends his madness into which he went to fool people into thinking he was not onto the king but he was and that’s why he was acting crazy. This shows that the innocence he once had that was ripped from him caused him to die as well as many a people
So in the end is innocence something we are born with. Or is it attainable in childhood. Or is it ripped from our toddler hands to soon to see the world in all its harsh light. So all in all these books provided why taking innocence might not always be a good idea, this stories also have so many hidden meanings that they are still finding hidden ones even today. So in total is innocence may be destructive when taken from the person who held it. Ernest Hemingway once said â All things truly wicked start from innocence.â That can mean whatever you may think it means but I think it means that for it to be truly wicked you must start out doing it innocently but realizing your wrong but continuing anyway.
Throughout the first three acts of the play Macbeth by William Shakespeare, the character Macbeth uses deception to his advantage in many ways. Three notable times are when he uses deception to make it easier for him to kill Duncan, aid in framing the guards for Duncanâs murder, and remove suspicion that he killed Banquo. […]
Imagine a world where you were destined for a dramatic downfall. It is such a world that becomes the fate of a tragic hero. A tragic hero possesses a tragic flaw, which ultimately leads to their downfall. Within both selections, the tragic Shakespearian play Macbeth, as well as, the dystopian novel The Stone Angel, by […]
Lord Actonâs quote, âAbsolute power corrupts absolutely,â relates to Shakespeareâs Macbeth and Pol Pot. Having power drives certain individuals to to turn against the less powerful. Two such examples are Pol Pot and Macbeth. The play Macbeth by Shakespeare is one of the best examples of how too much power can corrupt certain individuals. When […]
The theme of victimization and its impact on Macbeth, the protagonist in William Shakespeare’s play Macbeth, is examined. Different forms of victimization in his surroundings cause Macbeth to lose his authentic identity. Lady Macbeth’s immense ambition tricks him into murdering the king. This concept originates from the prophecies made by the witches, who plant in […]
Adolf Hitler is a dictator of the twentieth century who is very similar to Macbeth. Macbeth being a fictional character created by William Shakespeare, and Hitler being a actual dictator in real life. They resemble eachother most in their career as soldiers, their challenging rise to power, their heartless actions, and their trecherous downfall. Before […]
William Shakespeare wrote many great plays and one of the criticsâ favourites is Macbeth. The tragedy of Macbeth is a very violent and bloody play, filled with betrayal, mystery and murder. After Macbeth becomes king, he is threatened by his best friend, Banquo, so he orders to have him killed. He hires three murderers to […]
Aristotle once said, “The tragic hero must be neither villain nor a virtuous man, but a character between these two extremes. â[1] Such a person would be Macbeth, who begins as a highly respected thane by the King. However, due to the mystical prediction of the Three Witches and Macbethâs unquenchable thirst for power, he […]
Tragedy occurs when the tragic hero of a play fails to evaluate himself and sees that he is the main problem and the one that is causing society and the good of mankind to suffer. It is because of his compulsion to evaluate himself justly, that tragedy occurs. Aristotle provided us with a Greek theory […]
Act III Scene IV, popularly known as the Banquet Scene sees Macbeth and his wife playing as the perfect host and hostess in the solemn banquet following Macbethâs coronation in Act II Scene IV. Macbeth plays the humble host and mingles with the assembly giving âfirst and last the hearty welcomeâ. Lady Macbeth is gracious […]
From the beginning of Macbeth, the main character and protagonist showcases a disturbing aptitude for violence, instantly establishing him as a “butcher.” This is highlighted when the captain describes Macbeth’s sword, which is depicted as “smoking” with brutal execution. Shakespeare’s incorporation of satanic imagery through the word “smoked” implies that Macbeth’s sword was employed to […]
My first point is that they were both murdered. Banquo was stabbed to death by two assassins hired by Macbeth. While Hamlet’s father was poisoned by his brother Claudius. So both of these murders were committed by different methods. Also both these murders were established for greedy purposes. Banquo was murdered because Macbeth thought that […]
For my essay I am going to compare the tragedies of Macbeth and Lady Macbeth and decide whose is the greater. I will look at how Shakespeare exploits language to heighten drama and tragedy for the audience. William Shakespeare wrote ‘Macbeth’ around the year 1606. It is widely thought that the play was written for […]
The relationship between Macbeth and Banquo is a short one but never the less is still an important one. When we first meet Macbeth and Banquo we see their friendship in full strength although during the play we see their relationship drastically change. The first time we meet Macbeth in the play he is with […]
Until the Victorian era, the reigning monarch had complete control over the country. The monarch was capable of uniting the country or creating unrest and chaos. England was very unstable following Henry VIII rule until Elizabeth. Elizabeth had a very strong personality and managed to unite the country. However, she had no heir and named […]
The witches, Macbeth or Lady Macbeth. In one way or another all of these characters are connected and responsible for King Duncan’s murder. It takes each of the characters to play a part in his death and therefore if Macbeth had never met the witches then the whole affair could have been avoided. Macbeth is […]
The play begins with the king praising the brave and loyal fighter, Macbeth. After meeting with the evil witches, Macbeths wife plays on his emotions, convincing him to kill his king, and betray God, in order to become the heir, and fulfil the witches prophecy. In the first two scenes, we do not meet Macbeth. […]
This essay will consider this scenes repetition from earlier in the play. It will also consider some of the themes and images in this scene and throughout the rest of the play. One of the themes running throughout the play is control. Early in the play she says: “Think of this, good peers, But as […]
In the play “Macbeth” I think that Shakespeare is trying to say a number of things about evil. He uses through out the play the characters and language to show and represent ideas and concepts about evil. In the play Shakespeare shows that evil is something that you should try and avoid at all costs […]
From the instant Macbeth stabs Duncan he can never rid himself, those close to him and the ‘Divine Scotland’ of the multitudinous scenes of carnage. Macbeth is the darkest and most brooding of all Shakespeare’s texts, from his first encounter with the witches he plummets into a world of ruthless ambition, murder and an ongoing […]
The interaction between the Macbeths in the above scene portrays the nature of their relationship, until this point. The main message conveyed in this scene is that Lady Macbeth is the dominant partner in their relationship, which is shown through the ease of her manipulation of him. In act one scene five, Shakespeare explains Lady […]
This depends on the audience, and their interpretation of a hero. Exactly what constitutes a hero has no doubt changed since 1600, although some of the core elements have remained the same. For example, in Shakespeare’s time, a hero had to be – without exception – male. This, although perhaps not strictly true today – […]
Macbeth Quotes Act I 1. Scene 5 (Line 76) The speaker is Lady Macbeth and she is instructing her husband to put on a facade of kindness upon Duncan arrival but to be stealthy when committing the murder. This is an example of imagery because she uses a metaphor by telling her husband to become […]