c) Kant in this work, talks about what enlightenment is, and why would someone not be enlightened. He states that a person is not enlightened because of himself. He says "Enlightenment is man's emergence …show more content…
These lines are spoken by Lady Macbeth, she is displeased because of the crimes the committed and trying to calm herself down. This is one of the parts of Macbeth we realize how the situation is getting out of hand. This part of the text occurs right before murderers are dispatched to kill Banquo. Although they will kill Banquo, they will fail to kill his son who will eventually fill for the empty spot in the crown later.
c) We know from the very first parts of Macbeth that all Macbeth and Lady Macbeth wanted was to commit something really, really horrible and get everything over with. The whole crime the committed was to achieve something Macbeth destined to in a fast and easy way. We see Macbeth's desires in "If it were done when ’tis done, then ’twere well tt were done quickly. If the assassination could trammel up the consequence, and catch with his surcease success; that but this blow might be the be-all and the end-all here, but here, upon this bank and shoal of time, we’d jump the life to come" (Macbeth, 1:7 ln 1-7). This was his main motivation. But towards the end of the work, we saw that this wasn't the case. Macbeth committed much more evil things to keep himself and Lady Macbeth somewhat safer. And this passage is the first place we learn for sure that this wasn't going to happen. "Using those thoughts which should indeed have died, with them they think on" …show more content…
Macbeth starts to get more withdrawn, starts hiding things from Lady Macbeth. Starts to become less dependent on her. In the beginning of the play, we were introduced to a determined Macbeth. A killing machine, a punisher. Later on, we saw a confused Macbeth who is more dependent on people's advice and then his own. But in the end of the play, Macbeth again became a more determined person. Only with more evil. This strain in Macbeth and his wife's relationship shows us that Macbeth is again becoming a more independent person. Not fully, but he starts to