Deception
An Analysis of the Three Main Methods of Deception in the Play Macbeth Deception, it’s always out there, lying and waiting, ready to strike. Traitors are easily one of the most terrifying people in any country. Traitors can easily manipulate people in power, kill anyone they feel necessary to kill, could tell the enemies secrets of the country he/she is in, and are willing to betray their own people. There are always traitors no matter what, someone will always be influenced to betray their own country. What makes traitors easily one of the scariest people is that they are very elusive, or deceptive. It is very hard to catch a traitor before they have done any damage. Nowadays, it is easier to catch traitors because they often post on social media and the government can hack into the servers and catch that particular traitor. But, it still is very difficult to catch a traitor. In the play Macbeth, the main character, Macbeth, power-hungry, wants to become king. Macbeth
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Macbeth, in my opinion, is a play that has a plot line that resembles times in history. Examples such as Brutus and many other people betraying Julius Caesar in 44 B.C., as well as Hitler fooling the people of Germany into giving him supreme power in running Germany, and John Wilkes Booth peer pressured his assailants to help him in murdering the president, vice president, and secretary of the United States (even though some of the assailants bailed during the assassination attempt). With all of the bloodshed and violence in many of the Shakespeare plays, if one is smart enough to read deeper in these plays, one can see that all of these plays have words of advice in them. Macbeth is no different. Shakespeare uses Macbeth as a dummy almost to show why people shouldn’t do what Macbeth