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Descriptive Use Of Imagery In Macbeth By William Shakespeare

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Stories have an incredible ability to make readers see without using their eyes. Words that are carefully placed together can create strong moments and feeling that the reader can easily visualize. A writer and author who had best mastered this skill was William Shakespeare. Even though Shakespeare wrote plays that were eventually performed live, he was still able to use imagery to describe scenes that did not take place on stage. Because Shakespeare successfully understood human nature, his imagery made the plays he wrote more emotional and complex. Imagery can be described in several different ways. Visual imagery is one that most readers are familiar with. This is when the writer uses descriptive words to create an image in the reader’s minds. For example, saying the girls golden hair glittered in the sunlight or the stars speckled the dark sky like precious jewels would create a distinct picture. Another type of imagery is olfactory imagery. This is when descriptive words are used to create a smell. This can become a powerful tool since humans are able to remember smells longer than any other sense they posses. Auditory imagery is when a reader can hear sounds when reading certain text. Examples of this can be the crack of a rusty cannon firing …show more content…

The most powerful example of this in the play is in the second act. The scenes in the second act are shrouded darkness. The darkness foreshadows King Duncan’s death and the evil that is brewing within Macbeth. In scene four of the play, the character Ross describes the darkness after Duncan’s death. He says “By th’ clock ‘tis day, and yet darkness strangles the traveling lamp. Is’t night’s predominance, or the day’s shame, that darkness does the face of the earth entomb, when living light should kiss it” (2.4.6-10)? This visual imagery describes how dark the scene really is. This creates an eerie atmosphere for the events that continue to transpire after Duncan’s

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