Macbeth Haunted Night

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Journal 4 Adrenaline invigorates people and feeds the natural human desire for it. The easiest way to supply this craving is by being scared. Halloween is a day revolving around this beast and all wishes for it will be fulfilled, causing my time to be spent at a haunted house. Right before Halloween, my friends, Caroline, Sydney, Amanda, and Abe, decided that being scared was the best way to celebrate the coming of our favorite holiday. Sydney found a place that claimed to be the scariest place in New Jersey. I agreed because I knew that it was only going to be actors wearing makeup who were just trying to startle people. We were told that it would take us around thirty minutes to get through the house, so it would not be too bad if one of …show more content…

Macbeth learns that MacDuff knows too much and that he is in danger because MacDuff may reveal that Macbeth murdered Duncan and placed the blame on the guards. When Macbeth realizes this, he calls two murderers to “give to the edge o’ the sword / His wife, his babes, and all unfortunate souls / That trace him in his line” (4.1.151-153). He orders that MacDuff’s family be assassinated even though MacDuff was the one that knew the truth about Duncan’s death. Macbeth did not want MacDuff to have any lineage or family ties remaining in case the first apparition came true, and MacDuff’s family would end up royal. Lady MacDuff is killed in her castle and before she dies, she clarifies, “I have done no harm. But I remember now / I am in this earthly world, where to do harm / Is often laudable, to do good sometime / Accounted dangerous folly” (4.2.70-73). She has not done anything bad to anyone, but she is still killed due to her marriage to MacDuff. Her title of Lady MacDuff led to her death being demanded by Macbeth. In contempt of her lack of wrongdoing, the murderers stole her life away from her she was associated with a …show more content…

People are stuck with guilt because they only look at the situation from one perspective: the perspective of the antagonist. Lady Macbeth can be considered an antagonist because she provoked Macbeth to kill Duncan. In most views, she would be considered an accomplice to murder, and that is the perspective that she has on the situation. However, Lady Macbeth needs to see that she did not perform the action that catalyzed her immense guilt; Macbeth did. She may have been part of the influence to killing Duncan, but she is not the reason that Duncan is dead. Duncan is dead because Macbeth chose to kill him. In addition, Lady Macbeth was not fully aware of the murder because she did not knot if Macbeth would actually go through with it. None of her knowledge was ever confirmed, preventing Lady Macbeth from stopping a potential assassination. The principal piece to managing guilt is to try seeing the circumstances from another, typically the opposing,

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