Act 2. An unnatural night comes to take place in Macbeth, with weather and animals symbolizing evil unleashed by Macbeth's action of killing King Duncan. Nature seems to be responding to the immortal act that Macbeth committed by representing evil with different occurrences mentioned like the night taking over the middle of the day. Also with the king's horses who were the beautiful and most valuable becoming savages and wild, converting them into cannibals and eating each other. Along with an owl, that prey on mouses, killing a falcon which is extremely unusual and unexpected in nature. This unnatural and predatory behavior can be compared to Macbeth's actions, having him disrupt and unbalance nature with him killing a good king and unleashed evil.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
How Cow Post Relates to Macbeth
I was asked by little Sarah how my previous cow post related to Macbeth, this I why...
-
Throughout the play Lady Macbeth insanity shows to be increasing, it doesn't take a genius to know why.... she pretty much was the cause...
-
Wonder what is up with Shakespeare and his father son relationships in his plays. Either the son witnesses the father being killed or the fa...
-
Macbeth's character changes drastically from good to evil, this can be seen throughout all five of the acts . At the beginning, Macbeth...
No comments:
Post a Comment