she plans on piosoning him
Basically, a huge army is going to attack his castle. MacDuff hopes to be the guy who will fight with Macbeth so he can kill him and get revenge for his wife and children. It's not really a plan.
Someone has done someone wrong (usually by killing one of their relatives) and therefore the wronged person plans to take revenge. The revenge is delayed through the play as the revenger plans it. Often a ghost or personification of revenge appears demanding that the revenger take revenge. The play usually ends with the success of the revenge but the death of the revenger.
Please rephrase this question. As it stands it sounds like Claudius took a cab downtown to Ernie's Pawnshop to get a loan on a map owned by Hamlet. What other kind of plan did Hamlet have? Hamlet is famous for not making plans, of not thinking out any practical scheme to accomplish his revenge.
Revenge Tragedy is a technique used in plays. It involves the leading character avenging the death of a loved one. The most famous Revenge Tragedy is William Shakespeare's 'Hamlet'.
In "The Cask of Amontillado," the protagonist Montresor was not jealous of the jester. Instead, his motive for seeking revenge on Fortunato was due to a perceived insult. Montresor felt that Fortunato had humiliated him, and his jealousy did not factor into his plan for revenge.
He's not, he was tricking him into thinking he cared Montressor needs to make sure that his plan goes off without a hitch. If Montressor were to act indifferent to Fortunato's health, Fortunato may suspect that Montressor was up to no good.
In "The Cask of Amontillado," the conclusion reveals that Montresor successfully carries out his plan for revenge by walling up Fortunato alive. The story ends with Montresor feeling satisfied that he has finally gotten his revenge for the perceived insults he endured from Fortunato.
It was midnight when Montresor's plan was almost complete in Edgar Allan Poe's short story "The Cask of Amontillado."
Revenge!!
It depends on which instance.
Montresor murders Fortunato by chaining him to a wall in an alcove in a cellar, and then sealing up the alcove with bricks and leaving him to die. The actual climax is when Montressor surprises Fortunato by chaining him to the wall. At that point the suspense over whether or not Montressor will achieve his revenge is over. The final actions in bricking up the niche and trying to speak to Fortunato are essentially falling actions.
Rogers does not have a plan of revenge in The Scarlet Letter. Roger Chillingworth, the character you may be referring to, seeks revenge on Arthur Dimmesdale, Hester Prynne's lover, for betraying him. Chillingworth's revenge takes the form of psychological torment and manipulation rather than overt actions.
Since being gay is not a bad thing, you have no reason to take revenge.
The climax of "The Cask of Amontillado" by Edgar Allan Poe occurs when Montresor chains Fortunato to the wall and begins to wall him up alive in the catacombs. This moment marks the peak of tension and suspense in the story as Montresor carries out his sinister plan for revenge.
Montresor pretends to be concerned about Fortunato's health in order to manipulate him and lure him into the catacombs where he plans to enact his revenge. By showing fake concern, Montresor is able to exploit Fortunato's weakness and lead him into the trap without suspicion.
shut up and yeah the the not and done