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Friday, March 15, 2019

Analysis of Macbeths Soliloquy :: Papers

Analysis of Macbeths Soliloquy I have chosen one of Macbeths soliloquys from Act 1 Scene 7. This scene follows Lady Macbeth welcome Duncan into the castle to have a banquet to celebrate the sucess of the battle primarily that day. Macbeth has left the banquet to ponder the idea of implementationing King Duncan. Macbeths head start lines suggest If it twere done when tis done, then twere well it were done quickly In these first lines t present are many elisions making it very quickly spoken, Macbeth cannot don to stay on the subject of murder for very long. Here Macbeth is saying, if further his troubles would end with Duncans murder, then he would go ahead and do the murder, quickly. He just wants to get it over and done with. The use of it shows Macbeth victimization neutral, non-specific language to disasociate himself as far as possible from the murder. Macbeth fears the consequences of the murder and implies that he would go ahead with the plan for the murder, if he were sure that this would be the be-all and the end-all, present . Macbeth goes onto visualise himself as a fisherman we see this in the lines But here upon this bank of and schooltime time He is netting the consequences as he stands on the shoal of time, perhaps in an unspoken sea of eternity. This is a very healthy image. He then suggests that he would risk being damned to travel king Wed jump the life to come There is a sort of over-confidence and instability in the word jump, as if to jump off a cliff. Life is a vague euphemism, for hell, Macbeth uses these a lot to avoid associating himself with the act of murder and its spiritual consequnces. The we in this line could be seen the royal we which would show he is already beginning to think of himself as king. Macbeth also fears the consequences of killing Duncan in this world We still have judgement met here

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