Macbeth Act 2 Discussion Questions

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Macbeth Act 2 Questions

There many types of figure of speeches in Shakespeare's novel Macbeth. Three figure of speeches In act two are metaphor, simile, and personification. In one of the metaphors Lady Macbeth compares the sleeping dead to pictures. This displays her extraordinary courage and calm state of mind after the murder, “The sleeping and the dead are but as pictures. ‘Tis the eye of childhood that fears a painted devil.” (II.ii.2-5). A simile that is present in act II is in the old man's remark to Ross who describes the atmosphere of the earth, weighing it to the murder of Duncan “'Tis unnatural/Even like the deed that's done.” (II.iv.12-13). After murdering Duncan, Macbeth, personifies sleep in his quote, he is committed …show more content…

37) Macbeth is also worried he will never sleep again due to the crime which he committed.

Macbeth, after he discusses the crime with Lady Macbeth, decides to go through with the conspiracy . He waits for the bell which will order him to murder Duncan, he starts to question his decision one final time. The focus of the invisible dagger soliloquy, is to show Macbeth's powerful imagination, the imagination that is mostly responsible for his mental breakdown, Although Macbeth knows that the dagger is an illusion, and suspects that it could be brought about by his ambition to become king, he allows the invisible dagger, to affect him greatly. As the talk of the murder is about to drain his courage, Macbeth's intense illusion is shattered by the bell, the signal which is given off by lady Macbeth to give him the “go” to the murder. When Macbeth returns after killing Duncan he is saddened and regrets the treason he has committed. Images in this scene …show more content…

Macbeth is so scared of the blood he has on his hands that he says he would turn all the green waters red “Will all great Neptune’s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? No, this my hand will rather The multitudinous seas incarnadine,Making the green one red.”(II.ii.61-64). However, Lady Macbeth is calling Macbeth a coward when she says " My hands are of your color, but I shame/To wear a heart so white." (II.ii.65-66). Lady Macbeth is not scared of the blood at all. Her response is ironic because she speaks about the blood as a physical state as macbeth on the other hand speaks about it at an emotional and psychological

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