That he is so exhausted from the bloodshed caused by his actions that he is almost immune to the pain of death.
"She should have died hereafter. There would have been a time for such a word." What Macbeth is saying is "I don't want to hear this now. It would have been better if you'd told me later." With an invading English army approaching his castle he cannot lose focus. This is not the time with dealing with his feelings about his wife's death. Nevertheless he feels them, because they send him immediately into that bleakest of soliloquys, "tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day."
He is complex, with both good and bad qualities.
"She should have died hereafter. There would have been a time for such a word." What Macbeth is saying is "I don't want to hear this now. It would have been better if you'd told me later." With an invading English army approaching his castle he cannot lose focus. This is not the time with dealing with his feelings about his wife's death. Nevertheless he feels them, because they send him immediately into that bleakest of soliloquys, "tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day."
Macbeth's reaction to what? The news that he's been made Thane of Cawdor? His wife's death? The appearance of the witches? Duncan's appointment of Malcolm as Prince of Cumberland? The news that Birnam Wood is moving?
It doesn't take much by this point in the play to guess that Macbeth is under a lot of mental stress and is coming apart at the seams. At this point he doesn't want to deal with it. "She should have died hereafter; there would have been time for such a word." But although he says he does not want to deal with it, whether he likes it or not, it severs the last kind connection between Macbeth and anyone or anything. Even shortly before he was trying to hire doctors to help his wife's mental health; now there is nothing to live for and nothing to die for. His life is, as he says, "a tale told by an idiot, full of sound and fury signifying nothing." He is severely depressed.
He's a very emotional chap. We see this again when he hears about the death of all the members of his family. Of course, only Malcolm could fail to get emotional on hearing that story.
Macbeth has both good and bad qualities, but ambition and his wife's arguments are influencing him.
The family could afford to put up a fancy monument in Stratford Church, which you can still go to see if you want. That must have cost a penny or two. One can infer from this that they were well-heeled.
Since the Montagues ask Benvolio to find out what is bothering Romeo, we can infer the following:Benvolio is a confidant of RomeoThe Montagues know that Benvolio is Romeo's confidant.The Montagues trust Benvolio.
the traveler dies
Doctors believed in a blending of religion and medicine.
"She should have died hereafter. There would have been a time for such a word." What Macbeth is saying is "I don't want to hear this now. It would have been better if you'd told me later." With an invading English army approaching his castle he cannot lose focus. This is not the time with dealing with his feelings about his wife's death. Nevertheless he feels them, because they send him immediately into that bleakest of soliloquys, "tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace from day to day."
You can infer what happened in the chemical reaction that the equation represents.
Oh Hellen Was fustrated
reaction rate doubles with every 10 K temperature change
It means, what do you understand from the observations. Like, is a certain process or reaction suggested to occur?
Macbeth has both good and bad qualities, but ambition and his wife's arguments are influencing him.
(Apex) That he is upset about Caesar's death.
That he considered Caesar a friend.
The family could afford to put up a fancy monument in Stratford Church, which you can still go to see if you want. That must have cost a penny or two. One can infer from this that they were well-heeled.
* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce* understand * construe * infer * deduce
that he considered Caesar a friend
I do not think that "mental case" is an appropriate phrase to use for any mental illness. Perhaps, in this case, "paranoid" might be a better word here. The answer, I suppose, depends on whether people are actually gossiping (or giving an impression so that a reasonable person would infer they are gossiping) about that person!