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Macbeth Soliloquy Act 1 Scene 7

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Leading up to the murder of King Duncan Macbeth seems Indecisive, he can’t seem to make up his mind about the assassination and seems to be battling his thoughts between his ambitions and desires to be king and his loyalty and reputation. Spoken by Macbeth in his soliloquy in Act 1 scene 7 “If it were done when ‘tis done, then ‘twere well/ It were done quickly” shows his sense of urgency, he wants to get the murder done ‘quickly’, he’s afraid of the consequences of the murder, after all it is a crime he would have to commit and it would only be natural for him to feel nervous which revealing his paranoia. Furthermore the use of monosyllabic words such as ‘it’, ‘were’ and ‘done’ give the his a fast paced structure which mimics the content of …show more content…

Yet again the use of present tense of ‘it is’ tells us that he has made his mind up about the murder. The words ‘bloody business’ contain a sinister undertone due to the alliteration of plosive sounds, additionally the use of ‘bloody’ creates allusions about death which shows that his mind is already corrupted with wicked thoughts. This quote is followed by “Nature seems dead, and wicked dreams abuse curtained sleep”, illustrating Macbeth’s paranoia and rather haunted thoughts. ‘Nature seems dead’ represents how ‘nature’ is disagreeing with Macbeth’s plans of throwing the chain of being into chaos, there may also be a ‘double entendre’ here, Shakespeare may be suggesting that human nature even seems dead, that even the idea of killing for greed of power is against human nature. Business. In general we could say that Macbeth is rapidly vacillating his thoughts, he still doubts himself and is rather torn between his well earned reputation and deep desires. The closer Macbeth gets to the murder, the more evil and disloyal he becomes, however Macbeth seems quite different following the

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