Macbeth And Lord Of The Flies Comparison

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The quote, “Man is not truly one, but truly two.” can be analyzed from a behaviorally or mentally aspect. Physically, man is one, but if you delve deeper into the man, he can be separated into two parts which creates a whole man. In the play Macbeth and in the novel Lord of the Flies, some of the characters can be split into two conflicting parts. The characters are neither entirely good or entirely bad. In both the novel and the play, something happens to the characters that made them split into an evil side, thus creating two men. In the novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding, most of the boys on the island split into an evil side due to the fall of civilization and fear. The protagonist Ralph in Lord of the Flies by Golding changed during the novel. At the start of the …show more content…

Most people probably thought that Lady Macbeth did not have a humane side to herself and is self-centered. When Lady Macbeth was hiding in the bushes waiting for Macbeth to return, she was talking to herself. At the beginning of Act II scene 2, Lady Macbeth shows her sympathetic side by stating “He could not miss 'em. Had he not resembled My father as he slept, I had done’t.” Lady Macbeth is inherently a person with emotional attachment, but when it comes to her ambitious needs, she shows a different side of herself. In conclusion, the quote “Man is not truly one, but two.” is supported by both Lady Macbeth in the play Macbeth and Ralph in Lord of the Flies. Both characters have certain instances where things, whether it is their surrounding or personality makes them change into a wholly different person. When it comes to Ralph, he is inherently evil, because society keeps man under control and in the novel, society fell which unleashed the savagery in all of the characters. Lady Macbeth, however, is inherently good, but due to her motives on being wealthy, she became an evil, manipulative

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