Deceitful And Ruthless In Macbeth

237 Words1 Page

Deceitful and ruthless, in Shakespeare’s Macbeth, Macbeth shows multiple times that he is a liar and will lie to further his own ambitions/prove his innocence. For instance, after Macbeth murdered king Duncan’s guards, he lies as to why he killed them. “Th’ expedition of my violent love Outrun the pauser, reason… That had a heart to love, an in that heart Courage to make’s love known?” (Act 2, Scene 3, Lines 104-105, 111-112) Macbeth did not kill the guards out of rage and for Duncan, Macbeth killed them to prove he was loyal and innocent to the king/kings’ men and cover up the fact that he was the murderer of Duncan. If Macbeth truly loved Duncan, he would have never killed him and would had never had to kill the guards. Another example that

Open Document