In Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the murder of King Duncan is not so easily culpable as many characters hold a certain level of responsibility. While it is easy to hold Macbeth responsible, as he was the one that committed the act, Macbeth is not the only one that played a hand in the inevitable downfall of Duncan. Upon a closer look at the events leading up to the murder, other influences in Macbeth’s decision emerge. While some were more influential than others, it still cannot be ignored that Duncan’s
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Motivation is what encourages a person to behave in a certain way. Cruelty is a common motivator that is mostly used in a selfish way to one’s advantage. Whether it’s throwing others under the bus, or just wanting the attention. In The Crucible, a girl by the name Abigail William’s selfishly wants a married man by the name John Proctor and shows no remorse for any of her actions in her attempt to acquire get him. Her barbarous decisions lead her to a pool of lies, and deceit. The main message in
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In the book The Crucible by Arthur Miller, John Proctor emerges as a tragic hero. A tragic hero is a person who makes a judgement that eventually leads to his or her downfall. Romeo is famous for being a tragic hero in the play, Romeo and Juliet. John Proctor is a tragic hero because he is lustful, hypocritical, and highly respected. John Proctor reveals himself as a tragic hero for being lustful. He had an affair with Abigail. Abigail says, “I know you clutched my back behind your house and sweated
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In Thomas C. Foster’s Chapter 11 of How to Read Literature Like a Professor, “...More Than it’s Gonna Hurt You: Concerning Violence,”compares violence in literature to violence in the real world. Violence in literature can mean a lot of things and be a lot of things like “symbolic, thematic, biblical, Shakespearean, Romantic, allegorical, transcendent,” etc. while violence in the real world is exactly as it sounds, aggressive and mean (Foster 95). Joseph Conrad killed off his characters by having
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heme: Mankind’s own technology will lead to its downfall and self-destruction. By Waters of Babylon: The vision of the men destroying themselves. “I have been in the fights with the Forest People -- I have seen them die. But this was not like that. When god's war with gods, they use weapons we do not know. It was fire falling out of the sku and a mist that poisoned. It was the time of the Great Burning and the Destruction.” (P. 7 Last paragraph) Nightmare #3: Mankind built advanced machinery
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One way Tim O’Brien expresses the fear of showing weakness is through himself, when he decides to go to war because he is embarrassed to be talked about. Tim is afraid of what the people in his town will say about him if he runs away to Canada to avoid the draft. Tim is not the only one who feels this way; he thinks, "It was what brought [the soldiers] to the war in the first place, nothing positive, no dreams of glory or honor, just to avoid the blush of dishonor”(O’Brien 21). It is interpreted
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Kissin’ Kate Barlow was one of the most feared outlaws in all the west… Kate burst open the front doors to the sheriff’s office with an evil but happy smirk across her face, holding her gun firmly in her hand. She strode along the dusty streets. The Town of Green Lake was so silent you could hear a pin drop; apart from the faint tapping of footsteps from Kate’s diamond encrusted boots. She had stolen the boots from Trout Walker’s mother after being enraged at Trout for killing the only man she would
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Appearance vs. Reality In the novel Night (1956), Elie Wiesel illustrates the horror that he faces through the Holocaust. Wiesel’s drive to get out of the concentration camp with his father alive causes him to be directed through all of these challenges. When it seems that everything is lost time after time again, he starts to lose himself and his humanity. Wiesel’s detailed descriptions of the Jews denying their inevitable truth that had shown right in front of them is also later shown that not
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Macbeth and Gender John J. Armes, M.Ed. Ashford University June 4, 2018 Dominance; This theme occurs in so many of William Shakespeare’s plays because it is vital to the creation of conflict within a storyline. The Plot of Macbeth would have never advanced if the foresight given by the witches did not make Macbeth willing to take power away from Duncan and become king himself. Many of Shakespeare’s female characters have also been willing to obtain power; however, achieving power was not as
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“Double, double toil and trouble” (Shakespeare 4.1.20). One of the most iconic lines exclaimed by the witches from Shakespeare’s Macbeth, symbolizes a common theme found in English literature: the effect of the supernatural. The supernatural is constantly exploited by authors to develop their plot. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, the supernatural is something “belonging to a realm or system that transcends nature, as that of divine, magical, or ghostly being.” As well as William Shakespeare
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