Priyanka.LEC052035.Critical analysis of the significance of 'equivocation' in Macbeth
Priyanka
Professor
Joseph Koyipalli
Academic
Writing
14
January 2021
Critical analysis of the significance of ‘equivocation’
in Macbeth
An
‘equivocator' is a person who tries to mislead through language and the major
elements of equivocation are: A lie is not actually told and the truth is not
told either but, a false idea is deliberately fostered. The use of ambiguous language to conceal the truth or to
avoid committing oneself is used quite often in Shakespeare's play, Macbeth. It can be said that the play itself is based
on equivocation. The three witches, Lady Macbeth and many other characters
including the conscience of Macbeth, the hero himself have the equivocate part.
In Macbeth it's everywhere. The atmosphere of the play is filled
with it.
Between 1598 and 1606, in England, there was much talk of
equivocation. The Gunpowder Plot, a conspiracy to blow up Parliament, had failed,
and the conspirators had been arrested. One of them, Father Henry Garnett, a
Jesuit, used equivocation during the trial. He was found guilty anyway and
sentenced to death, but before he died, he claimed that equivocation is
sometimes justified. Since then, in England the term 'equivocation' is quite
familiar among the people. The term became notorious at the trial with the
execution of Father Garnett. Also, it has been well recognised that
equivocation is a major theme in the play, both in the narrow sense of common duplicity
and in the larger sense of a blur between appearance and reality. But in short,
the meaning of the term is highly connected with deceit and treason.
The
drunken Porter in Macbeth says: "Faith, here's an equivocator, that
could swear in both the scales against either scale; who committed treason
enough for God's sake, yet could not equivocate to heaven. O, come in,
equivocator” (Shakespeare 2.3.74). The speech has often used as one of the means
of dating the play because the term and manipulating factors of “equivocation”
became notorious due to the gunpowder incident. When Macbeth visits the
witches for the apparition, the witches that are working for the devil,
equivocate all their apparitions. They say “Fair is foul, and foul is fair” (Shakespeare 1.1.51) in
the very first scene itself. The witches are the most appropriate example of equivocation
even though the tragic hero Macbeth is quite an equivocator himself, but the
witches are more dangerous because it’s their twisted words that fueled the vaulting
ambitions in Macbeth which eventually led to his downfall.
Both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth play the role
of equivocators when they behave so hospitably towards King Duncan when in actual,
they were planning to murder him in their castle and later assassin him in real. Macbeth
equivocates when he tells Banquo they will talk the next day, knowing
that the murderers will kill Banquo later that day. Malcolm
suspects Macduff of equivocation when Macduff comes to England to
join Malcolm in the fight against Macbeth. Further, this theme
is emphasized by the porter in the famous comic relief scene that
separates the murder of King Duncan from the discovery of his body by
Macduff. It is in the porter scene (act 2, scene 3) where the word
“equivocation” is mentioned and how most of the characters use it as their main
tool. Even Lady Macbeth through equivocation provokes Macbeth to kill the noble
King Duncan.
From the play, a number of examples can be
sited where the art of misleading through language is evident. Role of the
equivocators here, is indeed a major reason for all the miss happenings of the
story. Equivocators with their indirect language conceal their real intentions
with which the entire story get twisted mostly in a tragic way, they can even
be the foundation for construction of a story as in Macbeth. Also using them, plot twist and major incidents of a play
or story can take place.
Work
Cited
Huntley,
Frank L. “Macbeth and the Background of Jesuitical Equivocation.” PMLA, vol.
79, no. 4, 1964, pp. 390–400. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/460744. Accessed
12 Jan. 2021.
Shakespeare, William. Shakespeare's
Macbeth, Text with note. 1st ed., Calicut University, 2000
Tromly, Frederic B.
“Macbeth and His Porter.” Shakespeare Quarterly, vol. 26, no. 2, 1975, pp.
151–156. JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/2869244.Accessed 12 Jan. 2021.
The entire essay seems very academic and she has a good command over language too. But she failed to follow the MLA rules at certain places. She didn't intend the first line of her first paragraph and some errors were committed in the works cited section. But overall it is a good essay.
ReplyDeleteThe essay is very good. As we are following MLA style 8th edition, we need to put hanging intend for the second line in each works cited.
ReplyDeleteThe essay is written well. The choice of sentences and arguments related to thesis is crafted well.The first line in first paragraph is not intended.
ReplyDeleteMLA format has been followed by you to an extent, hypothesis and your argument are very intense even though you lacks continuity between the paragraphs. The conclusion part is very striking.
ReplyDeleteThe essay is well crafted. The content is good, there is clarity and has tried to obey the MLA eighth edition format, though it is not strictly obeyed.
ReplyDeleteThe essay was well structured. Many evidence were presented to support the argument. MLA rules were not strictly followed.
ReplyDelete