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Evidence
Likewise, the metaphor, later in the play, of “I had most need of blessing, and “Amen” / Stuck in my throat.” demonstrates Macbeth’s religious guilt as a result of his murder by reframing a declaration of belief as blasphemous.
1 - By describing confession….
By describing confession as blocking an airway passage, Shakespeare positions this contemplation and torment as suffocating, with the conflict of admittance and restraint toiling over Macbeth’s cognitive state.
2 - His paradoxical expression…
His paradoxical expression of being in desperation for holy forgiveness, yet unable to admit his faith, exemplifies how the consequential guilt of his actions stains his morality and rejects his Catholic stewardship.
3 - This not only…
This not only illustrates a disruption in Jacobean natural orders, like the hierarchy of the feudal system, religious values, and gender expectations, but also shows how this collapse burdens Macbeth’s psychological state.
4 - Through this…
Through this, Shakespeare articulates the toll of blood and guilt as haunting and corrosive, by utilising Macbeth’s characterised religious trifle to show an isolation from initial divine consideration.
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His strife between a desire for sacrilegious conduct and expected social values in sacred reverence reinstates how his conscience is governed by societal merit.