After the killing the King, Macbeth is dealing with the consequences. He tells Duncan the murder is done and the bell is telling him to go. Macbeth says to not listen to the bell because it summons you either to heaven or hell. “I go, and it's done; the bell invites me. Hear it not, Duncan; for its knell That summons thee to heaven or hell.” (II, I, 70-72) A bell does not actually invite him, so it's an example of personification. Macbeth is thinking about the consequence of his actions. A quote that shows this is, “I have done the deed. Didst thou not hear a noise?”(Macbeth) “I heard the owl scream and the crickets cry. Did not you speak?” (Lady Macbeth). (II, II, 14-16) Lastly, “Thy very stones prate of my whereabout” (II, I, 59) Macbeth knows that although those around him don't know about his crimes, the earth and the heavens know …show more content…
“As happy prologues to the swelling act of imperial theme.” (I, III, 131-132) So far the witches have told Macbeth two things that came true, so it seems like this will culminate in him becoming king. “Your hand, your tongue. Look like an' innocent flower.” (1, V, 56) Lady Macbeth is telling Macbeth to greet the king with a welcoming expression in his eyes, hands, and words. She's telling him it should look like an innocent flower, but to really be the snake that hides underneath the flower. “Into the air, and what seem'd corporal melted, as breath into the wind.” (I, III, 82-83) Macbeth is saying, into thin air, their bodies melted like breath in the wind. The purpose of a simile is to give information about something that is unknown to the reader, by comparing it to something the reader is familiar