Tuesday, September 3, 2019

The Sense of Evil Conveyed in Shakespeares Macbeth Essay -- LIterary A

Throughout his play, Shakespeare uses a wide variety of themes in order to convey the sense of evil. These themes are omnipresent, and well implemented into the text, as they allow the reader to visually imagine the different occurrences, and how they might lead to a sense of evil throughout. The themes included consist of appearance and reality, guilt, ambition, violence and tyranny and order and disorder. Several quotes are weaved into the text in order to express more clearly the theme Shakespeare is attempting to convey. The themes all come together to enhance the dark symbolism of evil, and how it is actually conveyed. The most prominent theme throughout Macbeth is ambition. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth risk their innocence and will in order to pursue the throne. Lady Macbeth sees her husband as a coward, and therefore this relates to the theme of Violence and tyranny, as she is ruthless in getting what she desires. Lady Macbeth speaks about Macbeth’s ambition: â€Å"Though wouldst be great Art not without ambition, but without the illness should attend it:† This important quote enables us to understand Macbeth’s nature, which is â€Å"too full of the milk of human kindness†. Lady Macbeth’s provocation enlivens the evil residing in Macbeth and his ambition receives a new dimension: â€Å"I have no spur to prick the sides of my intent, but only vaulting ambition, which overleaps itself and falls on the other.† Throughout the play, Macbeth’s rising sense of ambition and realization, leads to him enhancing the themes of guilt and violence, as ambition ac ts as ‘the four legs’ that hold the two upright. â€Å"Your hand, your tongue, look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under't". Lady Macbeth tells Macbeth that she is trying to s... ...onstantly repeats the procedure of washing her hands, as she believes that water would simply ‘wash away’ her dirty deed. â€Å"Will all great Neptune's ocean wash this blood clean from my hand?† expresses Macbeth’s extreme quilt, and the fact that he believed that if he were to wash his hand in the ocean, it would all turn completely-blood red, due to the severity of the deed committed. It is a hyperbole. Guilt seems to play a motivating role when Macbeth says, "Things bad begun make strong themselves by ill" Macbeth tries to explain that if a dangerous deed was continually done, its pain would eventually go away. He also explains that his morals were poisoned and were used to motivate him to commit more murderous crimes. " If’t be so, for Banquo’s issue have I filed my mind; for them the gracious Duncan have I murdered; Put rancors in the vessel of my peace".

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