English, asked by mfox22, 21 hours ago

How does Shakespeare establish the motif that people cannot be trusted or should not be trusted easily throughout Act I of Macbeth?

Answers

Answered by nidaeamann
0

Explanation:

These lines are taken from Macbeth, a play written by famous Shakespeare.

In the play, Macbeth has been shown as a character who says one thing but does the other, means he was an untrustworthy guy. Macbeth pretended to be a loyal subject to King Duncan but infact he was against him.

But in the end of play,  Macbeth had died and The king of that regime was Malcolm who also scolded Lady Macbeth for her work and that she had taken her own life

Answered by Anonymous
0

Shakespeare has established the trust connection by showing Macbeth being disloyal all the while.

  • Macbeth said something and did something else and was be untrusted. He had an ambitious wife and also a habit of being paranoid.
  • He poses as Duncan's loyal subject. The wife advises him to be clever and cunning, as no one will notice. Thus, by pretending to be friend and welcoming him to his castle, he was actually planning his murder.
  • Another reason he was untrustworthy was his wife was greedy and desperately wanted him to be the king. He may have been harmless before she came along, but she made him dangerous and pushed him when he faltered.
  • After killing Duncan, he became more dangerous. He assassinated his friend Banquo to prevent his sons from becoming kings and as he suspected Macbeth, he murdered Macduff's entire family.
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