Examples Of Turn In Tides In Macbeth

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Turn in Tides “...Seize upon Fife, give to th' edge o' th' sword His wife, his babes, and all unfortunate souls That trace him in his line” (4.1.170-174). In act four of Macbeth, Macbeth demands Macduff’s entire castle be murdered in full resolve and utter insanity. He becomes the very personality he disdains from the start of Macbeth. However, it cannot be simply chalked up to a shift in heart but, instead, a diagnosable disorder that contributes to his full-fledged lunacy. It is easy to assume that Macbeth was only influenced into his craziness; but upon further inspection Macbeth had, without a doubt, developed Bipolar Disorder. He quickly changed from a virtuous and proud warrior to a liar and thief of the crown once Lady Macbeth had pressured him into killing Duncan. From thereon out, Macbeth quickly made his descent into madness; a combination of manic episodes, delusions, …show more content…

In transition from act two to act three, you can clearly see this. Macbeth had contemplated killing Duncan thoroughly and with very combative internal arguments. However, when he begins to suspect Banquo to become his ruin, he does not hesitate to consider Banquo’s death; even more, Banquo’s son, Fleance. This is a very impulsive decision for Macbeth to make. He does not stop to consider the consequences, but instead immediately hires murderers to kill them both. Macbeth’s impulsiveness is yet another symptom of bipolar disorder. His impulsive decision provides Macbeth with yet another issue he must address, Macduff. Expectedly, his previous impulsive decision cascades into another. Macbeth thinks the only solution to Macduff is killing his entire castle, including Macduff’s family. However, this leads to all of England opposing Macbeth. Had Macbeth thought of the fallout, he could have potentially avoided conflict with England. Nonetheless, Macbeth is brought even closer to his demise through his

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