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Examples Of Hallucinations In Macbeth

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In the play Macbeth by Shakespeare, Macbeth is given the idea by the three witches that he will be king and rule. Due to this idea, Macbeth is influenced to do just about anything in order to have that idea come true, even if it meant to murder. Hallucinations are known to be an experience in which to have an insight of something that is not present. These hallucinations are an example of his guilty conscience coming forward and making him feel paranoia. William Shakespeare's Macbeth is a tragedy play that shows guilt, murder, power, and how all of these impact people. Shakespeare's use of blood imagery is used to emphasize the guilt, and reversal of guilt, makes Macbeth and Lady Macbeth have hallucinations. The first time Macbeth had hallucinations …show more content…

As Macbeth was giving his speech about Banguo’s death in which Macbeth played a part in hiring his men to kill him and his son Flenance, he is shaken by an allusion of Banguos’s ghost sitting at the head of the table, which is suppose to be Macbeth’s “place”. As everyone is gathered around the table, Lennox tells Macbeth to sit besides him at the head of the table, and that is when Macbeth sees Banguo’s ghost and questions which one of them are playing a joke on him. He says; “Thou canst not say I did it: never shake Thy gory locks at me” (Act 3.4). Before even seeing Banguo’s ghost, Macbeth is already paranoid in asking his men numerous times if Banguo is really dead, and he is having a hard time processing if this is the truth. Macbeth being the only one who can see his ghost shows how his sub-conscious and the fear and guilty has completely traumatized him. At the table, everyone is confused in Macbeth’s paranoia and wonders what he is talking about. As usual, Lady Macbeth tries to calm down Macbeth but he is in no way of understanding what she is saying. Macbeth starts to panic which lead to Lady Macbeth to depart the guests and try to again calm down her husband. In contrast, every time the ghost comes and disappears his relief is very much softer, he says “Can such things be / And overcome us like a summer's cloud, / Without our special wonder?" (Act 3.4). The structure of this …show more content…

She started to sleep walk and refer to the murder of Macduff’s wife and children. From the beginning, Lady Macbeth wants her audience to think that she is a tough person as she is manipulating Macbeth to commit a act of sin which in contrast, when she is sleeping she shows another personality where she is weak and much of a coward. Throughout the play, we see from Macbeth’s horror at the banquet, the murder of King Duncan, and the letter from Macbeth announcing the witches foretelling. In all of this, there are deep and dense panorama of all her crimes being passed before her. In Act 5 scene 1, there is a conversation between the gentlewoman and the doctor being concern on how Lady Macbeth sleep walks and refers about blood. She says; “The thane of Fife had a wife: where is she now? —What will these hands ne’er be clean? —No more o’ that, my lord, no more o’ that: you mar all with this starting.” The scent and sight of blood in which she experiences is one of the reasons which the hallucinations are being developed out of unconscious, just like Macbeth’s hallucinations of the dagger. Blood is seen to be focused more of the tragedy. Lady Macbeth seems to always mention a spot of blood or how the smell or sight of blood seems to never wash off of her skin. It is seen as the idea that her hands are contaminated or are dirty, in reference to a dirty act being

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