Light And Dark In Macbeth Essay

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Shakespeare uses imagery of light and dark to enhance the images between good and bad. Light and dark, day and night, good and bad can be noticed throughout the course of the entire play. Darkness is squeezed between light and is used to intensify the moment and catch the audience’s attention. The motif of light and dark can be used in a literal use, but it also takes on a symbolic meaning of one’s ambition and deceitfulness that can lead them to their ruins. King Duncan announces that his eldest son, Malcolm would be the next heir in throne. Although, Macbeth, aside, speaks to himself while he thinks of killing King Duncan, “Stars, hide your fires; /Let not light see my black and deep desires/The eye wink at the hand, yet let that be/Which the eye fears, when it is done, to see,”(1.4). Macbeth’s desires are so terrible that he doesn’t want light, which can be represented as God , to see that he wants to murder King Duncan in order to receive the crown. Ambition begins to fill his mind and hopes that the darkness can help hideaway the evil thoughts. …show more content…

The three witches equivocally told Macbeth and Banquo their fate in the future. In Act I, Banquo actually refers the witches to Macbeth, “The instruments of darkness tell us truths,/Win us with honest trifles, to betray's/In deepest consequence,”(1.3). Banquo warns Macbeth to be cautious of the of what the witches had told him because “the instruments of darkness”, the witches, can deceive a person to betray another and lead them to their ruins. The three witches subtly create temptation when they inform Macbeth that he was destined to be king, putting this thought into his head, bringing ambition to overpower his mind, which led to his own destruction. This motif is significant in the fact that Banquo foreshadows the terrible actions that Macbeth commits, such as him killing Banquo to ensure that the crown stays on his

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