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macbeth tragic hero

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macbeth tragic hero
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  • (1.7)
  • I have no spurTo prick the sides of my intent, but onlyVaulting ambition, which o’erleaps itselfAnd falls on th’other
  • (2.2)
  • Will all great Neptune’s ocean wash this bloodClean from my hand? No, this my hand will ratherThe multitudinous seas incarnadine
  • (5.1)
  • To bed, to bed. There’s knocking at the gate. Come,come, come, come, give me your hand. What’s donecannot be undone. To bed, to bed, to bed
  •  he compares to a horse and rider who overestimate their ability to leap over an obstacle, and end up falling down. The passage describes the tension between Macbeth’s unwillingness to move ahead with his plan, and his acknowledgement that his ambition is leading him down a dangerous path.
  • 3.4
  • Thy bones are marrowless, thy blood is coldThou hast no speculation in those eyes 
  • Macbeth speaks this line when he encounters his wife right after murdering Duncan. He refers to both the literal blood on his hand but also to his sense of guilt. 
  • (5,1,31)
  • "Out,damned spot! Out, I say!"
  • Lady Macbeth speaks these lines after she has gone mad. They are the final words she utters in the play, and they reveal how guilt has crushed her strong and assertive personality. She now has to be cared for like a child, and has no plans for the future. No matter how much she repents, the violence and death cannot be undone.
  • "One cried, 'God bless us!' and "Amen" the other,/As they had seen me with these hangman's hands./List'ning their fear I could not say "Amen",/When they did say 'God bless us!'"
  • Macbeth speaks this line when Banquo’s ghost appears to him at the banquet. Macbeth’s vision of the ghost reveals his guilt over ordering the murder of Banquo and his young son. His sense of guilt is so powerful that he loses his sense of reality and cannot be sure whether he is having a vision or not.
  • Lady Macbeth's guilt is seen as she sleepwalks through the castle, hallucinating and rubbing her hands together as if she is washing them. Lady Macbeth's subconscious feelings are revealed. The 'spot' she is reffering to the imaginary blood she sees on her hands from the murder of King Duncan.
  • , Macbeth has just killed King Duncan. He feels extremely guilty after commiting the crime. He commits this murder with his amibition to become the King but eventually is destroyed by the power of guilt. Macbeth expresses the words he used to say easily such as 'Amen','God bless us!' has all become words impossible to say. Macbeth thinks that God will no longer protect him because of the great muder commited.
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