Examine the arguments of those who object to the Porter's monologue in Macbeth and to the succeeding dialogue between and Macduff.
Date Submitted: 01/08/2003 19:34:23
In every great piece of literary work, two aspects can be found. One deals with different values and incidents from the contemporary society while the other reflects eternal and universal values in them. But the more interesting
fact is that these two aspects can lie hidden in a single piece of work.
Shakespearean dramas are also no exception. Besides, these dramas, in them, have a few scenes that appear to provoke laughter but underneath lie
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echoes the words of Moulton referred earlier---- "All action in any direction is best expounded, measured and made apprehensible by reaction."
According to him Shakespearean works "are not as those of other men, simply and merely great works or art, but are also like phenomena of nature the further we press in our discoveries, the more we shall see proofs of design and self supporting arrangement where the careless eye had seen
nothing but accident."
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