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  1. Apr 27, 2024 · Dive into the depths of ambition, guilt, and remorse through these memorable quotes that encapsulate the theme of death in Macbeth. Explore the powerful and haunting death quotes from Shakespeare's tragic play, Macbeth.

    • Puccini: Tosca (Stabbing) Baron Scarpia is writing the safe-conduct at his desk, when Tosca catches a glimpse of the knife on the dining table and realises that there may be another way out for her.
    • Poulenc: Dialogues des Carmélites (Guillotine) Few composers kill off more characters in one scene that Francis Poulenc does at the end of his Dialogues des Carmélites, yet few death scenes are quite as poignant.
    • Mozart: Don Giovanni (Dragged down to hell) The sextet at the end of Mozart’s opera agrees: Don Giovanni got what he deserved. After seducing and breaking the hearts of – according to Leporello – thousands of women and killing Donna Anna’s father, the Commendatore, he’s dragged down to hell by a statue of his victim.
    • Shostakovich: Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk (Poisoned mushrooms) I love a mushroom stroganoff as much as the next person, but even my stomach turns queasy when thinking about the fate of Boris in Lady Macbeth of Mtsensk.
  2. Mar 3, 2024 · Explore the most haunting and thought-provoking death quotes in Shakespeare's Macbeth. Discover the tragic downfall of Macbeth through the voices of the characters as they reflect on the fleeting nature of life and the consequences of their actions.

  3. 1. the Roman fool. Macbeth is thinking, no doubt, of some old Roman, such as Brutus or Cassius, who killed himself when he saw that his cause was lost. 2. the gashes, the wounds my sword can make. 4. Of all men else, more than any other man.

  4. In spite of the fact that one of the witches' prophecies has betrayed him, Macbeth still holds faith in the other. He is encouraged to greater confidence in this scene by his easy victory over young Siward, and this renders the shock of his disillusion in the following scene all the more terrible.

  5. 1. How has Macbeth changed since his last soliloquy? 2. Why does Macbeth find fault with Lady Macbeth's dying? 3. How does this soliloquy show that the true tragedy of Macbeth lies not in the violent deaths of the characters, but in the world-view of Macbeth? 4. How do you feel about Macbeth at this point in the drama? Do you pity him?

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  7. Study with Quizlet and memorize flashcards containing terms like "We'd jump the life to come" - knows that he would go to hell (regicide), "deep damnation" - will go to hell, "tears shall drown the wind" - pathetic fallacy if D dies and more.

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