Tuesday, May 28, 2019
Macbeth - The Importance Of Night :: essays research papers
When I thought about the role that the word "night" would play in the tragic play "Macbeth," I found that there were a variety of possibilities. Immediately, I thought of the nighttime as a period of rest and revitalization. I expected that this would allow characters to recover from the days many demands. Secondly, I connected the night to the unknown. In the nights cloak of darkness, many more things could go undiscovered than in the revealing light of day. Next, I thought that the night would mean vulnerability. As the evening closes in, everyone begins to wind down, not expecting any real action until the breaking of the dawn. In addition, while one is sleeping, they are susceptible to almost anything. The most synthetical time to make an attack would definitely be after nightfall. Lastly and perhaps most importantly, is nights correlation with evilness. As children, we were all afraid of nasty monsters that lurked in the darkness of night. The night has long b een believed to host supernatural beings and occurrences. As I read the play and came upon the word "night," I was surprised to discover that all quatern aspects of my hypothesis were correct. First, in act I, we see the first usage, night as a period for rest and revitalization. In scene iii, lines 19-23, the First Witch says, stay shall neither night nor day / Hang upon his penthouse lid / He shall live a man forbid / Weary sevnights nine times nine / Shall he dwindle, peak, and pine / Though his bark cannot be lost, / Yet it shall be tempest-tossed.Here, she is punishing the sailor by depriving him of his sleep, which she realizes is important for anyone to function normally. Without the ability to recuperate after each(prenominal) hard days work, one would grow very weak and eventually start to lose ones mind. Next, we can observe nights connection to the unknown. As seen in my word journal, peeress Macbeth beckons, Come, thick night, / And pall thee in the dunnest s moke of hell, / That my keen knife see not the wound it makes, / Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark, / To cry "Hold, pee-pee" Without the obscurity of night, she would not have urged Macbeth to kill the king as she did. The night, however, gives her the impression that Macbeth can indeed kill King Duncan with no one uncovering his pitiable crime, the same idea that Macbeth had when he said, "Stars, hide your fires / Let not light see my black and deep desires.
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