Shakespeare uses soliloquies extensively in Macbeth to reveal the inner thoughts and motivations of the tragic hero. In his first soliloquy, Macbeth debates killing Duncan and the potential consequences. He is conflicted between his ambition and the immorality of murder. His next soliloquy shows his fearful hallucination of a dagger before killing Duncan. Throughout the play, Macbeth's soliloquies track his dehumanization as he murders to gain power but finds no peace of mind. His final soliloquy acknowledges life has become empty and meaningless. The soliloquies provide crucial insight into Macbeth's psychology and the nature of evil in the play.
Shakespeare uses soliloquies extensively in Macbeth to reveal the inner thoughts and motivations of the tragic hero. In his first soliloquy, Macbeth debates killing Duncan and the potential consequences. He is conflicted between his ambition and the immorality of murder. His next soliloquy shows his fearful hallucination of a dagger before killing Duncan. Throughout the play, Macbeth's soliloquies track his dehumanization as he murders to gain power but finds no peace of mind. His final soliloquy acknowledges life has become empty and meaningless. The soliloquies provide crucial insight into Macbeth's psychology and the nature of evil in the play.
Shakespeare uses soliloquies extensively in Macbeth to reveal the inner thoughts and motivations of the tragic hero. In his first soliloquy, Macbeth debates killing Duncan and the potential consequences. He is conflicted between his ambition and the immorality of murder. His next soliloquy shows his fearful hallucination of a dagger before killing Duncan. Throughout the play, Macbeth's soliloquies track his dehumanization as he murders to gain power but finds no peace of mind. His final soliloquy acknowledges life has become empty and meaningless. The soliloquies provide crucial insight into Macbeth's psychology and the nature of evil in the play.
Shakespeare uses soliloquies extensively in Macbeth to reveal the inner thoughts and motivations of the tragic hero. In his first soliloquy, Macbeth debates killing Duncan and the potential consequences. He is conflicted between his ambition and the immorality of murder. His next soliloquy shows his fearful hallucination of a dagger before killing Duncan. Throughout the play, Macbeth's soliloquies track his dehumanization as he murders to gain power but finds no peace of mind. His final soliloquy acknowledges life has become empty and meaningless. The soliloquies provide crucial insight into Macbeth's psychology and the nature of evil in the play.
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Soliloquy in Macbeth -- an Important Dramatic Convention
Soliloquy is a solo speech in a dramatic language in order to communicate the
inner structure and working of mind in a character. It is described as the outcome of natural situations on the state of characters emotions. Characters do, and at some length what person never do speak alone for a considerable length of time, and in verse too. But the soliloquy has the unique ability to suggest the subtleties of the hidden self of the speaker. In the Elizabethan dramatic tradition soliloquy became widely use as a vehicle for subjective utterance and became an important dramatic convention. Hamlet, Othello, Macbeth, Dr. Faustus all contain important examples. Much like a monologue a soliloquy and its imaginative space convey a great deal of information about characters their inner most thoughts, feelings, passions and motives. In Macbeth too much of the psychological and philosophical interest of the play reside in them. The soliloquies of Macbeth are more like interior debates, a fascinating aspect of Macbeths motivation. Shakespeare uses ample soliloquies in Macbeth to show the soul of the tragic hero trapped in the conflicting desires and motif. In the very first soliloquy of Macbeth we find him contemplating over the murder of King Duncan and its possible consequences. Just before the murder of kind Duncan, Macbeth ponders over the very thought of it and says : When it is done, then twere well It were done quickly: If th assassination Could trammel up the consequenees, and catch With his surcease success.. If there were an end of the matter as soon as the assassination was committed, then it should be done immediately; if it were not follow by a net of evil consequences, and bring success immediately, if it would lead to no punishment in this life then he would risk judge in the after life. What seems clear is that Macbeth is constantly changing his mind. His imagination is in the grip of a powerful tension between his desire to see himself as king and his desire of the immorality of the immediate consequences, which he knows will be disastrous. In the next soliloquy just before the murder of Duncan, Macbeth sees the fearful vision of a blood stained dagger leading to him to Duncans chamber. He addresses the hallucination of the dagger. He tries to grasp it but cannot and knows it is the product of his overheated brain. Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling, as to right? Or art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation Proceeding from the heat oppressed brain? Its important to stress the imaginative tensions in Macbeths character before the murder and to appreciate his divided nature. Thats why summing up his motivation with some quick judgment about his ambition is something one should resist. That resolves the issue too easily. In fact, Macbeth, in a sense, is tricked into murdering Duncan, but he tricks himself. That makes the launching of his evil career something powerful and complexity about the nature of evil in the play. However, Lady Macbeth thinks a little water will solve their immediate problem; Macbeth knows that is not too easy. He cannot live with what he is done and remain the same person. He says in a find soliloquy: Will all great Neptunes ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? No, this my hand will rather The multitudinous seas incarnadine Making the green one red. Just after killing Duncan Macbeth continues to murder his way in the frantic desire for peace of mind enroute evils. The great bond that links him to other human beings does virtually disappear, so that the pursuit of his desire for inner peace makes him careless and less for anything life has to offer. Macbeth spinning his dehumanization utters the most poignant soliloquy: Prof. Ali Raza Fahad Govt. Postgraduate College, Gojra
I have lived long enough. My way of life
Is falln into the sere, the yellow leaf, And that which should accompany old age, As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends, I must hot look to have, but in their stead Curses, not loud but deep, mouth honour, breath Which the poor heart would fain deny and dare not. Thus at the news of his wifes death, he responds in low key and bitter. In one of the overly greatest speeches in all of Shakespeare, he accepts the news with a horrifying calm: She should have dies hereafter.
tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow
creeps in this petty pace from day to day
out, out, brief candle.
Lifes but a walking shadow, a poor player That struts and freets his hour upon the stage, And then is heard no more. It is a tale Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury, Signifying nothing. This famous speech acknowledges fully the empty mockery his life has become. His life has become an insane farce, not because he no longer has any power or physical security, but because he has ceased to care about anything, even about his life. The theatrical metaphor quoted in the last soliloquy resonates throughout play. Macbeth has, in a sense, tried to seize control of the script of his life, to write it in accordance with his desires, in the clear knowledge. Thus all of the soliloquies of Macbeth become a close scrutiny of study of evil and of a conflicting soul of Macbeths personality.
Prof. Ali Raza Fahad Govt. Postgraduate College, Gojra