The Appearance vs Reality of Macbeth Things are not always how they appear. You may think of someone is a certain way because of what they say, how they dress and uplift themselves. Reality can be abrupt and leave you speechless. It can have you questioning who people really are and who you can and cannot trust. How far will someone go to gain your trust, manipulate you to do wrong and isolate you from what is right? From dark supernatural beings to innocent women and brave leaders. In “Macbeth” no one is really who they say they are. Shakespeare uses the main characters in the play “Macbeth” to introduce us to the illusions of appearance vs reality in life through literature. In “Macbeth” appearance vs reality is first introduced to us …show more content…
He is aware of his dark thoughts but tries to hide them from others. After becoming Thane of Cawdor during Macbeths Aside he says, “Let light not see my black and deep desires.” (1.4.51) this statement tells us he does have a dark side. Macbeth knows that his desire to become king should not overpower his kindness and loyalty as a person. Macbeth has a consciousness, as does everyone, to differ between right and wrong throughout his life. He asks the good to not see his bad, we can assume this means that hes hiding his thoughts from the good people in the play such as Duncan and his sons. Macbeth comes across grateful and noble when really, he is plotting to become king. Macbeth has a hallucination before killing Duncan. Macbeth says in his soliloquy, “a dagger of the mind, a false creation, proceeding from the heart-oppressed brain?” (2.1.38) Macbeth sees a dagger right before his eyes, this is a hallucination of his mind. The stress of deciding to kill or not to kill is causing his nervous system to affect his brain and thoughts. His hallucination was motivated by the witches and his wife. The witches' prophesy announces he would be king. Macbeth knows you must sacrifice certain things to gain others. His wife has a bigger impact to motivate the killing of Duncan by calling Macbeth a coward and un-manly to even be a king. The last person to convince Macbeth was himself. He completes this through an illusion of the mind. Macbeth as the main character shows the different realities and stress that deep desires can put on a