these connect to macbeth by macbeth was thinking of becomiing great earlier
I have no idea why you would get the idea that Banquo does not want to put out a candle. He is only in two scenes where he is in the dark: Act II Scene 1 and Act III Scene 3. In the latter he carries a torch which he drops when he is attacked. In the former he and his son are talking about how dark the night is: the moon is down and the stars (nights' candles) are not visible. But there is nothing which would suggest that he is carrying a candle. Some directors might put it in, but it is not in the script.
The eight nights the candles kept burning for the people in the hide out
In Act 2 Scene 2, Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] stabs King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040] and his two royal chamberlains to death. He is unhinged by the bloodied corpses and crime scene. He hears warning voices of sleepless nights for the rest of his life. One such voice accuses him, 'Macbeth does murther sleep...' [Line 36].
The Doctor has to wait 2 nights in order to see Lady Macbeth sleepwalking.
Hanukkah lasts 8 days. 44 candles are needed.
"I have two nights watched with you" . . . (the opening words of Act V.
You say the blessings over the candles. There are 3 blessings the first night, and 2 on all the subsequent nights.
Yes, but only after Duncan's murder. As Macbeth thought he heard, "Macbeth shall sleep no more," because he murdered sleep. He murdered Duncan in his sleep and his guilt murders his sleep. Lady Macbeth is also effected by all of this. Later in the play, she sleep walks and tries to wash the blood off of her hands, which symbolizes her unending guilt. She is reliving the nights that Duncan and Banquo were murdered and she is so paranoid that she must sleep with a candle so that she is not murdered in her sleep like Duncan. She is so guilty that she eventually commits suicide.
Candles are lit for all 8 nights of Hanukkah.
It takes a total of 44 candles to observe all eight nights of Hanukkah. Each night, one additional candle is added to the menorah, starting with one on the first night and ending with eight on the eighth night.
Midsummer Nights Dream by Shakespeare also, Macbeth by the same writer.
Romeo and Juliet A midsummer nights dream Julius Caeser Macbeth