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Macbeth

getting that they were the porters daggers, Lady Macbeth tells him to go and return them but he says that he will not go on any further. Even before Duncans murder, the tragedy inside himself had already kicked in, he started imagining a dagger floating in the air above him, he thought to himself whether this was a sign of madness.Is this a dagger which I see before me,The handle toward my hand? Come, let me clutch thee:I have thee not, and yet I see the still.Art thou not, fatal vision, sensibleTo feeling as to sight? Act 2. Scene 1. 33-37O full of scorpions is my mind, dear wife;Thou knowst that Banquo and his Fleance lives. Act 3. Scene 2. 36-37Murdering is a common scene throughout the entire play, from the first act to the last. All these murders relate to somebody or something else in a form of minor tragedy. Other deaths that result to tragedy in the play; is when the previous Thane of Cawdor was executed in Act 1. Scene 4, when Macbeth murders Duncan he hears a voice crying out that he has murdered sleep (Act 2. Scene 2), the Old Man in Act 2. Scene 4. 13 says that he has witnessed a falcon savagely killed by an owl, Was by a mousing owl hawkd atand killd which was strange because that was exactly one week ago before Duncans murder, when Macbeth kills Macduffs family in Act 4. Scene 3 and when Young Siward dies in battle in Act 5. Scene 7.Methought I heard a voice cry Sleep no more!Macbeth does murder sleep the innocent sleep,Sleep that knits up the ravelld sleave of care, The death of each days life, sore labours bath,Balm of hurt minds, great natures second course,Chief nourisher in lifes feast-..Still it cried, Sleep no more to all the house:Glamis hath murderd sleep, and therefore CawdorShall sleep no more, Macbeth shall sleep no more! Act 2. Scene 2. 35-43 Mainly, most of the tragedies are caused by the ill treatment of Macbeth, by his wife who controls his life, his thoughts and his actions. Lady Macbeth acts as...

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