Why is Lady Macduff upset at the beginning of Scene 2?

Why is Lady Macduff upset at the beginning of Scene 2?

HomeArticles, FAQWhy is Lady Macduff upset at the beginning of Scene 2?

At the beginning of scene 2 why is lady macduff angry with her husband? He has murdered them out of anger and revenge. Macduff’s family is in no way a threat to his throne. The murders emphasize his total moral deterioration because he has no justification for carrying them.

Q. Who says Angels are bright still?

Malcolm sats

Q. Why does Lady Macbeth call her husband a traitor?

In Scene 2, Lady Macduff complains about her husband and how he is a coward for leaving his family. She is angry and believes that “when our actions do not, our fears make us traitors” (4.2. 5), meaning she thinks he ran away to England out of cowardice, and that makes him a traitor to his family.

Q. Do you put up womanly defense?

Do I put up that womanly defense, To say I have done no harm? Where should I go? I haven’t done anything wrong.

Q. Who does the Porter think he is?

The Porter pretends to be the gatekeeper of Hell. He says Macbeth is going to Hell for murder and that Macbeth turned things into Hell with the murder. The Porter kind of serves as someone who is a distraction to help calm everything going on.

Q. What four things does the Porter say drinking provokes?

According to the Porter, drink provokes three things: a red nose (“nose-painting”), sleep, and urine (line 29). It provokes sexual desire, but takes away the ability to act on it: “Lechery, sir, it provokes and unprovokes.

Q. What is the porter scene in Macbeth?

The porter scene or the discovery scene (Act II Scene III) in Macbeth has attracted many critical commentary and conjecture. It comprises of two climaxes – the comical porter’s apparently irrelevant and tipsy comments and the discovery of the treacherous murder of Macbeth’s guest, King Duncan.

Q. What gate does the Porter pretend to open instead of the gate to Macbeth’s castle?

The porter pretends to be opening the gates to Hell instead of Macbeth’s castle. This is a comment on Macbeth’s situation because he just killed King Duncan and it is a very bad sin to commit. How is the murder of the king discovered?

Q. Why does Shakespeare use the weather to mimic events?

Hover for more information. In William Shakespeare’s tragic play Macbeth, imagery referring to weather and nature is repeated throughout. His use of weather/nature imagery highlights the importance that Nature (capitalized to show emphasis) is not happy (nature personified) with what is happening in Scotland.

Q. What is significant about Macbeth’s saying I think not of them?

He is worried about the witches. 3. What is significant about Macbeth’s saying, “I think not of them,” after Banquo had admitted to dreaming about the Weird Sisters? He is lying to his best friend.

Q. What does fair is foul and foul is fair mean?

The line “fair is foul and foul is fair” means that all is not what it seems. What seems good and trustworthy is actually not; what might seem repugnant is actually good. The witches are foretelling the treachery of Macbeth, who will commit treason by killing the king.

Q. What is Macbeth’s tragic flaw?

Macbeth’s fatal flaw in the play is his unchecked ambition, an unabated desire for power and position, namely to be king, which is more important to him than anything else in life. He is willing to give up everything that he has in his life in order to possess the crown to sit on the throne.

Q. Is Macbeth aware of his flaw?

Macbeth’s tragic flaw is the fact that the witches have completely taken over his head and Macbeth wants these higher titles. Macbeth is aware of his flaws, this is because of the fact that Macbeth keeps going for what he wants, no matter if people have to die because of it.

Q. What flaw pushes Macbeth from his stunning?

Expert Answers Macbeth’s tragic flaw is ambition.

Q. Who was murdered in Macbeth?

King Duncan

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