Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Free Essays - Isolation in Macbeth :: Free Macbeth Essays
      Isolation in Macbeth                       Isolation is a state of being separation between persons or group, or a  feeling being alone. There are different factors that contribute to someone  feeling alone and isolated. An example of this would be when celebrities go into  deep depression because they feel isolated from the whole world. They have all  the material things they could ever want, but the one thing they want the most,  they do not have. , which is happiness, which comes from satisfaction within  oneself and being satisfied with what one has done in one's life. Feeling  isolated does not necessarily mean a person is bad. Evidence in Shakespeare play  Macbeth , demonstrates this quite clearly that MacBeth's isolation comes from  guilt , over-ambition and greed.            Lady Macbeth and Macbeth have both shown guilt, but at different stages in  the play. Isolating guilty feelings only begins to isolate them from the world  around them. Macbeth is the first to feel guilt at the begging of the play, but  towards the end he has nothing but isolation. Lady Macbeth has both isolation  and guilt. In act III , scene two , lines 6 to 9, Lady Macbeth says, " Noughts  had all's spent, where our desire is got without content. Tis safer to be that  which we destroy". She is describing how the murder of Duncan has made them lose  everything but has made them gain nothing. Her guilt has gotten the best of her  by act IV, when all she has on her mind is guilt. When Lady Macbeth says in act  V. scene two, line 43 to 44, "Heres the smell of blood still. All the perfumes  of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand". She knows the murder is  irrevocable, and nothing can be done to erase the deed from her mind.            Over ambitious feelings pave the way to isolation. When MacBeth becomes over  ambitious about something. he begins to get absorbed into the ambition until  eventually the rest of the world does not matter anymore. It seemed as though  Lady Macbeth wanted the throne for her husband , more than he wanted it for  himself. She persuades him until he finally gives in, as shown in act II, line  54 when Lady Macbeth says, "When you durst do it, then you were a man".  					    
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