Examples Of 'Comic Relief In Macbeth'

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If a trusted friend of mine turned against me and betrayed my trust, I would be upset. I would be angry since they turned against me and because they would actually do something like that. I might also be sad that they went from being my friend to trying to become my enemy. My reaction may depend on how my friend went about turning against me. Though, no matter how they did so, it wouldn’t be a thing I’d celebrate about. I still wouldn’t be happy about it and would lose trust in that friend I had once trusted. We probably wouldn’t talk as much and our friendship would decline because of it and the actions they took. I would feel betrayed and would have lost trust in that person, which would affect our friendship. Comic Relief- Comic relief is when the author adds a comical scene after a rather serious part in the play. This gives the audience a break from all the tension in the story. You can see an example of comic relief when the porter starts talking, “here’s a knocking, indeed… I ask you to remember to tip the…show more content…
The didn’t want to be controlled and it is later said that the horses also ate each other. Nature was starting to react badly and like when Macbeth killed the king, the animals are starting to kill each other and those that are supposed to be higher or stronger than them. Finally, Lennox tell us that The night was unruly. Where we slept, chimneys were blown down; and it’s said that wailing was heard in the air-- strange screams, like people dying. And there were prophecies in terrible voices, telling of dreadful uproars and troubling events, about to make these days sorrowful…

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