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Wednesday, February 13, 2019

Masculinity in Shakespeares Macbeth :: GCSE English Literature Coursework

Masculinity in Macbeth Shakespeare   The great masterpiece Macbeth, which is create verbally by William Shakespeare, deals with many different hidden themes. One of the best-hidden themes in Macbeth is manhood. Shakespeares descriptions of his characters sire real descripitions of living beings, not actors upon a stage. His manuscript is able to manoeuvre the masculinity of men as well of women. Masculinity is not precisely for men some women are just like men in their quest for ambition. In the conform to Macbeth, it seems that Lady Macbeth is a man pin down in a womans body. She is filled with greed, envy, and hate, and she get out use any soulfulness or any thing until she gets what she wants or accomplishes her evil goals. In the play she hides her true feelings and pretends to be a normal lady. However, her evil nature shines by her false face. This just proves that Lady Macbeth is like a flush. A rose is pretty and smells great but if one is not careful t he thorns will prick the fingers. Lady Macbeth appears to lose her sanity the night of Duncuns murder and cannot bear upon to her feelings or guilty conscience. She admits that "she could kill her only child just as booming (I vii 72-74)". This really means that Lady Macbeth is colder than ice and seems that she lost(p) all preception of right and wrong. Then she tell her husband " a fiddling water clears of the deed" (II ii 66)". Lady Macbeth thought the killing would, be easy to accomplish, but in fact it was not as easy as she said or thought. In the play, to die without any solicitude seems to be the highest accomplishment of ones life. It seems that not fearing death is more important than inventing a great invention that could change the world. When young Siward dies, his father is more apprehensive about how he was killed. Siward wants to know where the wounds on his son were. When Ross tells Siward that his son had mark on the front of his body, his father is proud and brags about his death, "Why then, Gods solider be he ( V viii l 46)". Siward father seems to have no grief over his sons death by what he was saying. Ambition seems to be in all men, and all men strive to fill their necessitate for it.

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