In Act IV Scene 3, Malcolm very tediously tells Macduff that he is a bad person because he is sex-mad and greedy and what is more has no virtues whatsoever. However, he then says he is lying and that in fact he is a perfect person with no faults at all.
The phrase "Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair" is a line from William Shakespeare's "Macbeth." It reflects Macbeth's deep fear and anxiety, likely related to the haunting image of Banquo's ghost, which symbolizes guilt and the consequences of his ambition. This line captures the intensity of Macbeth's psychological turmoil as he grapples with the repercussions of his actions.
Macbeth speaks of playing "the Roman fool" because he is demonstrating his resolve not to take his own life .
your fat
I Kings 15:13 "He also removed Maacah his mother from being queen mother, because she had made a horrid image as an Asherah; and Asa cut down her horrid image and burned it at the brook Kidron." The king was Asa, his mother Maacah.
This line is spoken by Macduff in William Shakespeare's play Macbeth. He is referring to Macbeth as a devil more evil than any in hell.
In Act III of "Macbeth," it is the second witch who speaks first to the first witch, saying "Sister, where thou?" The witches are preparing to meet Macbeth and share prophecies with him.
Macbeth was written in the Jacobean times so i would say English but more of the olden type.
This line is from Macbeth in Shakespeare's play "Macbeth." The character who speaks these words is Macbeth himself, reflecting on how an uncontrollable force has disrupted his plans and desires.
The prophecy that Macbeth will be king puts the idea of murdering Duncan into both Macbeth's head and Lady Macbeth's. Before he even writes to her Macbeth says to himself, "why do I yield to that suggestion whose horrid image doth unfix my hair" and later, "let not light see my black and deep desires." She doesn't give him the idea. On the other hand, Macbeth does not put even the whiff of a suggestion into his letter that he has thought about murder, and Lady M says "Thou art too full of the milk of human kindness to catch the nearest way." She is thinking murder, but is afraid he isn't. Macbeth would have talked himself out of it, however, if Lady M had not pressured him into turning the idea of murder (which they both had) into reality.
Lady Macbeth meaning to the ornament of life can be refer to the golden opinions of line 33. It could even be refer to the crown.
The term used when anyone is alone on the stage and speaks is soliloquy. Macbeth has a dandy soliloquy in act 1 scene 7 when he comes onto the stage alone and says, "If it were done when 'tis done, it were well it were done quickly."
Macbeth does during a soliloquy in Act 3 Scene 2