Supernatural In Macbeth

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“[Thunder and Lightning. Enter Three Witches] When shall we three meet again, In thunder, lightning, or rain?... When the HurlyBurly’s done, When the battle's lost and won” (Mac. 1.1. 1-2) In the opening scene we immediately can tell the use of Shakespeare’s imagery and use of supernatural elements. The play starts off with a horrid storm that associates with black magic and the war against Duncan. The quote also insists that the witches’ never mention daylight, instead only bad weather, proving that their power brews off dark energy. The witches also have a plan to meet with Macbeth and give him the three prophecies. Paranormal activity follows through the whole play, and is an important role because it leads you into how obscure things get. …show more content…

Two events are representing the discard of Duncan’s death. “And yet, dark night strangles the traveling lamp, Is’t night’s predominance or the days shame, That darkness does the face of earth entomb, When living light should kiss it?” (2.4.7-9) stated by Ross. This event is to paint a picture that in the middle of the day darkness fills the sky and covers the sun, this image shows that light and darkness also are showing good and evil. Additionally, in the play sunlight happens only twice because the majority is wicked. Ross suggests is night getting more powerful with what’s going on or is day hiding in sin. In fact, in this scene the horses ate one another, proving to the reader that power is out of whack and this isn't normal. It also makes the reader question whether the witches are have more magnitude than we think; are they making the animals do this and making Macbeth go crazy or is it a …show more content…

This figure weighs on Macbeth and Lady Macbeth with the killings of Duncan and Banquo. Blood conveys to the reader from seeing them deal with guilt and how it makes them go insane. Macbeth says “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”(2.2.60-63) This is a metaphor saying that these huge waves will turn green into red blood, and nothing even this strong will get rid of his guilt. In result, Lady Macbeth thinks that if they wash their hands and get rid of the blood it will wash away his immorality. Even into Scene 5 you get an image of Lady Macbeth trying to wash away this imaginary spot of blood, because she’s trying so desperately to get rid of this remorse that’s it’s getting to her mental insanity. They start to realize it has stained their hands and they won’t be able to get clean from it, even causing Lady Macbeth to commit

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