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Metaphor In Shakespeare's Macbeth 'And The Tempest'

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Name Professor's Name Course Date Shakespeare and Theatrum Mundi The metaphor of the world and of history is a theatre on which characters appear and disappear is one of the most frequent of Shakespeare's metaphors, and is something that occurs at key moments in several of his most important works. Despite the frequent recurrence of the metaphor, however, it can be demonstrated to have different meanings throughout Shakespeare's work and, as such, to serve a different function with regard to the play in which it features. By considering the metaphor as it occurs in “Hamlet,” “Macbeth” and “The Tempest” it is possible to show how the different meanings that the metaphor comes to hold alongside what this may be seen to illustrate about Shakespeare's own views on the nature of reality and of human history. “Hamlet” is a work which has the actual performance of a play at its centre. This performance is used by the protagonist in order ascertain the guilt of his uncle and, as such, it takes its place in the play's general discourse concerning …show more content…

In this sense, the metaphor condemns all of history to insignificance and to darkness. That it is used in the final act of the play encourages the audience to reflect on the insubstantial nature of theatrical performance, but it also encourages them to recognize the complete break down of Macbeth's psychology. As a protagonist he has moved from affirming the capacity for great and meaningful historical action, to a complete refutation of the possibility for any meaning within history. As such, Shakespeare's relation use of the metaphor encourages reflection on the nature of reality, but it also serves an explicit function in the arc of the play, encouraging the audience to understand that the downfall of the hero is almost

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