It's because when Duncan said, "The air / nimbly and sweetly recommends itself / Unto our senses", it is dramatic irony because we know that in the scene just before, this is where Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are going to try and kill him.
That he is the person whom he seeks and that he is ensuring his punishment is what is ironic about Oedipus' long speech in "Oedipus Rex" by Sophocles (495 B.C.E. - 405 B.C.E.).Specifically, Theban King Oedipus gives his long speech immediately after the parados and at the very beginning of the first scene. He gives proof of blasphemous and rash tendencies by trespassing into divine decision making on who gets punished how. It is by this trespass that he removes from himself all hope of extenuating circumstances, leniency, lighter sentencing or pardon.
Two Guards are smeared in blood and knocked out. When they are conious they exucuated!!!!
what is ironic about the ending of act 111
Macbeth, yet guards were framed and Lady Macbeth was the plotter!
She berates the servant who brought the news. "Thou'rt mad to say it." Then she gloats. "The raven himself is hoarse who croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan under my battlements."
Because he lost his head in the end.
That so many of us would memorize his two minute speech and quote it often. ...use common sense.
If you mean the Duncans from Disney's Good Luck Charlie then yes. The mother is pregnant (again) with her fifth child.
toby
One example of irony in Creon's speech is when he states, "I have no desire to become the king of corpses." This is ironic because, ultimately, Creon's actions lead to the deaths of his own family members. Another example is when he proclaims, "The State is his who rules it." This is ironic because Creon's harsh rule ultimately results in great harm to the state and its people.
No (that was ironic).
your brother
it is a private server
Flore
Sydney
Bob Duncan
Yes!