What is the significance of act 1 scene 7 in macbeth




















The importance of Act 1 Scene 7 of Macbeth in the context of the play as a whole. I think act 1 scene 7 is one of the most important scenes in the play. I say this because you hear the main plot of the play i. It is here the characters of Macbeth and Lady Macbeth begin to develop. It shows the influence Lady Macbeth has on Macbeth, how great their love is, how strong her personality is and how well she knows Macbeth's weakness which is his fear of not being known as a man and she uses that against him.

There is no turning back from the chain of events that will lead to their downfall if Macbeth decides to kill the king. Macbeth is very ambitious, he wants to become king of Scotland and the witches prophecy in act 1 scene 3: - " All hail Macbeth, thou shaft be king hereafter! Macbeth has left the feast he is giving for the King in order to think things over.

Lady Macbeth persuaded Macbeth to murder King Duncan, which is one of the major tragedies in the story, so Lady Macbeth has an important role of the incident, which had occurred. As being the dominated one in their relationship Lady Macbeth uses all her control over Macbeth to make Macbeth murder king Duncan. She also challenges his patriarchy to make him murder the King.

For example, when Lady Macbeth says "When you durst do it, then you were a man. Throughout the speech, his words recall those of Shakespeare 's earlier tragic hero, Hamlet. In paraphrase, Macbeth wonders whether the act of murder itself must, by necessity, carry consequences in "the life to come" or whether judgment will await him in this life. Of further concern to Macbeth is the disparity between his own reputation and the world's perception of Duncan as a good and virtuous king.

The final section of the speech contains an apocalyptic vision in which he imagines Duncan's virtue and pity proclaimed as if by angels and cherubim from a storm-filled sky. This doom-laden vision, whose imagery for example, "trumpet-tongued" reflects that of the biblical Day of Judgment, gives way in turn to a nagging self-doubt. Lady Macbeth must immediately detect Macbeth's self-doubt. When Macbeth admits to her that his golden reputation might lose its "gloss," she sets out to strengthen his resolve by mocking his perceived weakness.

Her questions drive further the wedge between daring and doing, between courage and action, between desire and fulfillment. To these, she adds a distinction between masculinity and femininity: In contrast to her own self-proclaimed manliness, she pours scorn upon her husband's lack of courage. She tells him he is "green," "a coward," and that he resembles the proverbial "poor cat" who wanted the fish but would not get its paws wet.

Finally, and most damningly, she tells him that her own lack of pity would extend to murdering her own child as it suckled at her breast. With this one terrifying example, she confirms that "the milk of human kindness" is absent in her.



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