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Blindness In Macbeth

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"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" (i, iv, 53-55). Only light enable people to see, but sinners can't see through light owing to their blindness. These black and deep desires are the one corroding the light, bedimming those righteous decisions, in which it could come after anyone. The Shakespearean play of The Tragedy of Macbeth projected a reasonable and moral man on his downfall path. This tragedy originates from the rapacious desire that erodes Macbeth's self-consciousness and completely distorts his heroic character. Certainly, Macbeth's ambitions that blind his eyes must be seem as a dangerous and terrifying identity. At the beginning …show more content…

Macbeth thought it was a joke; however, when the first prophecy came true, his heart is shaken by desires. At this moment the imagination of himself wearing the crown, and besides is the blood that he must stain in his hand or else he could no longer clutch it. This imagination has ignited the scintilla of guilt thoughts deep in his heart. No wonder before he would hesitates, "If chance will have me king, why, chance may crown me/ Without my stir" (i, iii, 147-148), but currently, his eyes only stares at the "resplendent prize" and forgets all the goodness from King Duncan (Rolfe). While Macbeth stick his first foot on the swamp of curses, Lady Macbeth puts his other foot in. Hence, Macbeth could never return to a dedicator, who fights for his beloved king, but now he fights for his own desire. Lady Macbeth lured, "Come, you spirits/ That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here,/ And fill me from the crown to the toe top-full/ Of direst cruelty" (i, v, 37-40). She have overcame Macbeth's uncertainty by her clear willing to murder King Duncan and seize the throne, and her speech showed the real

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