Examples Of Hallucination In Macbeth

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A hallucination is an experience involving the apparent perception of someone or thing that is not present. They’re profound experiences that few will ever have because their psychology wouldn’t allow for such. For the average person there’s no grey area between what is real and what is a product of their imagination. Hallucinations were just one of many symptoms Shakespeare used to emphasize the deterioration of Macbeth’s state of mind. At this time there was little known about mental illness therefore symptoms would often be credited to self-infliction or as a supernatural occurrence. To no one but him, were Macbeth’s actions viewed as chivalrous. The tragedy of Macbeth was not a tale of fate, but rather that of a lustful paranoid schizophrenic in the deepest state of psychosis he’s experienced. …show more content…

They were no hallucination; they clearly manifested themselves before the two. Banquo, unconcerned by the prophecies addressed to him, thought perhaps they had eaten something to cause them hallucinate. This was a logical conclusion to be drawn, and perhaps if Macbeth would have thought the same, things would not have gone as they did. The witches weren’t so much of a shock for Macbeth as he was more intrigued by the prophecies, “All hail, Macbeth! Thane of Cawdor!” and “All hail, Macbeth, that shalt be king thereafter!” Macbeth didn’t hesitate to accept his apparent fate from the same source that Banquo questioned the very existence of. The prophecies unknowingly planted a seed of desire in Macbeth. He was guaranteed to be Thane and eventually King according to his fate. Macbeth would soon find Mcdonwald was defeated, crowning Macbeth Thane of Cawdor and proving power was in his fate and warranted no pursuit – at least from a logical

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