What is imagery? How does Shakespeare use imagery in Macbeth and his other plays? Imagery is when the audience uses their five senses while reading to create an image of what is being read in their head. Shakespeare uses imagery in the Tragedy of Macbeth and his other plays because it helps to connect the reader or audience to the characters of the play. Imagery draws a reader in and makes him experience or become a part of the character. When writing the play Macbeth, Shakespeare created an atmosphere around the characters and the overall setting of the play, with his use of massive amounts of imagery in Macbeth. Lightness and darkness are major examples of Shakespeare’s use of imagery in Macbeth. Often while Lady Macbeth is walking around, a candle is referred to as floating above her, as if the soft glowing light will keep the darkness at bay while she commits her acts of violence. Lady Macbeth believes that the light will keep her from murdering Duncan. In the end, the candlelight is not Lady Macbeth’s savior and she commits suicide to escape the violent world that she has created around her with murder and mayhem. Macbeth acts like his wife’s death is just a blip in his plans for the future, and he goes further to compare her life and death to that of the flame of a candle, which is easily extinguished. When something ‘bad’ or evil is about to happen, the night creeps upon the set to cover up the evil doings of the characters in the play. The evil that is being done to the characters are so dark that when the darkness comes it will cover up the sun at its brightest time of day, thus forcing the light away. Strange things that could not be explained started happening like when an owl attacked and killed an eagle and ho... ... middle of paper ... ...lt. Macbeth is haunted by his lost ego and starts hearing voices in his head. In the time period that the play Macbeth portrays clothing was often a symbol of your social status in the world. People could tell how high or low in society you were just by looking at your style of dress or suit, the cloths that were used in the making of the clothing, and how worn the clothing was. Macbeth used clothing to cover up his indiscretions and his guilty. At the beginning of the play, Macbeth wore clothing that was too small and showed how low he was in society, but after he was corrupted his garments became larger and looser which showed that he was seeking power and nothing would whet his power hungry ‘appetite.’ In other words, as the audience watches Macbeth they see Macbeth’s change in attire, which shows his slow progression from ‘light’ to ‘dark’ in moral character.
In Shakespeare's Macbeth, various types of imagery are used throughout the play. Five of these images are nature, paradoxes, manhood, masks, and light vs. darkness. In Act I, Scene i, Line 1, the description of "Thunder and lightning" represents disturbances in nature. The witches are surrounded by a shroud of thunder and lightning, which might personify them as disturbances. In Act II, Scene i, the dark night creates a perfect scene for the baneful murders.
William Shakespeare uses many techniques to liven the intensity, and the excitement in his plays. In the play of MacBeth, Shakespeare uses blood imagery to add a sense of fear, guilt, shame, insanity, and anger to the atmosphere. The use of blood imagery allows the audience to vision in their minds the crime scene where Duncan was murdered, as well as the scene where Lady MacBeth tries to cope with the consequences of her actions. The talk and sight of blood has a great impact on the strength and depth of the use of blood imagery.
Furthermore, when Lady Macbeth plots the murder of King Duncan she calls the “thick night” to “pall” “in the dunnest smoke of Hell” to hide her actions. She depends on the darkness to carry out the sinister deed. In addition, before and after the murder, there is much mention of nocturnal animals, for example, how the “owls shriek’d” and the “crickets cry”.
Guilt causes the main characters’ consciences to overcome them mentally and physically causing their downfalls. In the tragedy Macbeth by William Shakespeare, the recurring theme of night and darkness is used to symbolize guilt and conscience such as when Macbeth and Lady Macbeth want the darkness to conceal their evil deeds and in the end, when Lady Macbeth is afraid of the darkness and nighttime. In Act I, after King Duncan names Malcolm the Prince of Cumberland, Macbeth is already plotting to kill Duncan. He asks the darkness to come and hide his evil deeds so no one would see the terrible thing he was about to do.
Imagery is the use of symbols to convey an idea or to create a specific atmosphere for the audience. Shakespeare uses imagery in Macbeth often, the most prevalent one, is blood. I believe he uses this as a way to convey guilt, murder, betrayal, treachery and evil, and to symbolize forewarning of events.
(Macbeth 1. 1. line 1). This is a good example of darkness imagery because when
Clothing portrays who we are. Our style, our taste, our personality and so on. But it can also be a way to hide our true selves and can deceive by what we wear Masks. Macbeth certainly used clothing to hide something. He used clothing to hide his guilt. Not guilt as in the remorse he felt, but guilt as in the crime he committed. Macbeth chose to hide his guiltiness through dressing up like royalty. Royalty can be conveyed to show different things. Royalty portrays nobility, kind, pure and that was exactly what Macbeth need to hide the fact that he is guilty. Dressing like royalty can also show something else, it shows power, confidence and Macbeth needed that, he need to be a person who nobody could challenge he needed to hide his inner demons, his inner moral battle, his inner guilt. Clothing in this novel portrays not only style and a way for people to know how is who, but it was used to symbolize hiding the truth, to make sure the guiltiness does not come
Shakespeare is known for his descriptively rich plays. He also ways does an excellent job of describing both the characters as well as the setting. One specific area of the play MacBeth is the use of night and darkness to show evil or happening that are not right. Examples of this are the many appearances of the witches, the murders that occur, and the conflicts that MacBeth faces with his mental health. The following three paragraphs will further discuss these topics.
William Shakespeare's Macbeth is an ominous tale that illustrates the danger in violating the Great Chain of Being, the hierarchy of things in God's ordered universe. The Chain ranked all of creation and human society as well. It ranked kings above nobles and nobles above the poor. When Macbeth murdered King Duncan and assumed the throne, the Chain was violated and chaos resulted. The atmosphere of the play symbolized this resulting turmoil. Specifically, light and darkness were used to exemplify the unnatural chaos and ominous tone of the work. The role of light and the role of darkness relates to the chaos resulting from the violation of the Great Chain of Being.
Shakespeare often uses darkness and will frequently set the scene as a dark and stormy night. This depicts that evil happenings are occurring or are about to take place. There are at least three examples of this in "Macbeth". "The night has been unruly: where we lay,/Our chimneys were blown down; and, as they say,/Lamentings heard i’ the air; strange screams of death,..." (Act 2 scene 3 line 54-56). "Three score and ten I can remember well;/Within the volume of which time I have seen/Hours of dreadful and things strange, but this sore night/Hath trifled former knowings." (Act 2 scene 4 line 1-4). Both these quotes are talking about the night of Duncan’s death. They are showing the comparisons between the natural unruliness and the anomalous disaster. "And yet dark night strangles the travelling lamp." (Act 2 scene 4 line 7) is a metaphor for both the murder of Duncan and the night in which it transpired. A dark and stormy image is also portrayed when pernicious characters (ie. the witches, Macbeth and the murderers) meet.
The theme of appearance versus reality is very important in William Shakespeare’s Macbeth. The characters of Duncan, Macbeth, and Lady Macbeth are unable to differentiate between appearance and reality, resulting in tragic consequences. Poor judgment is evidenced by Duncan, who trusts Macbeth too much; Lady Macbeth, who is fooled by the witches; and Macbeth, who is tricked repeatedly by others.
... a dark setting used which involved supernatural events, while the light setting was used for last battle, when Macbeth was slain at the end to show the restoration of peace and honesty. Thus the symbolism of light and darkness representing good and evil in the play emphasizes the theme of corruption of power.
But for darkness its the opposite, all the bad events took place during the night, for example when Macbeth goes to kill king Duncan because of greed, he wasn't happy with the position he received, he wanted to be king so he can have more power. Another example of Darkness is when the witches come to tell him his prophecy (I, iii, 125). This is a type of tragic situation because if the witches hadn't appeared and told Macbeth that he would be king, he wouldn't have so much lust. In this scene, Macbeth describes the witch as an ugly old lady dressed in black. The color black represents the witch’s evil nature.
Within the play `Macbeth' the imagery of clothing portrays that Macbeth is seeking to hide his "disgraceful self" from his eyes and others. . Shakespeare wants to keep alive the contrast between the pitiful creature that Macbeth really is and the disguises he assumes to conceal the fact. Macbeth is constantly represented symbolically as the wearer of robes not belonging to him. He is wearing an undeserved dignity, which is a point well made by the uses of clothing imagery. The description of the purpose of clothing in Macbeth is the fact that these garments are not his. Therefore, Macbeth is uncomfortable in them because he is continually conscious of the fact that they do not belong to him. In the following passage, the idea constantly reappears, Macbeth's new honors sit ill upon him, like loose and badly fitting garments, belonging to someone else:
This specific action consequently resulted in Macbeth’s level of morality to continually decline as he is acutely aware of his own tyranny. Therefore Macbeth attempts to forget the horrific deed he has committed and be the figure that orders and disorders. Our perception of Macbeth being a wise and loyal soldier is now eroded, as we start to view Macbeth constantly questioning his own actions, and is also impelled to perpetrate further atrocities with the intention of covering up his previous wrong-doings.