Monday, October 31, 2016

Macbeth and Heart of Darkness

In the beginning, Macbeth and Kurtz were both driven by want for their cause, thus guide d have the dark agency to greed and in the end, their own deaths. Though both were direct to the same end, Macbeth and Kurtz were taken thither by genuinely varied paths. The last straws that guide them to their extremism were non that different and fueled by somewhat quasi(prenominal) discloseer sources. Macbeth at first had truly little want and infallible to be pushed and prodded, therefore, early on, he had his ambition funded by his wife, chick Macbeth, and three witches. The witches promised him the bay window and glory, as a prophecy. He accordingly felt obligated to kid his way to the top. A puffy portion of the early ambition was brought on by bird Macbeth, whom he loved really much, so her rhetoric was yet more(prenominal) effective. Through out the book he acted as though he did non attempt to acquire the throne for himself, but for his wife, and to fulfill what was promised to him. He felt a terrific amount of pressure, which pushed him oer the lightly line between ambition and greed.\nThough, as for Kurtz, his ambition was farthermost less innocent than that of Macbeth. Kurtz went to Africa to correct money for himself and be as profitable as possible, he still had many similar forces leading to his greed and accordingly his demise. He clearly conveys this when he stated, [has] no spur/ To neb the sides of [his] intent, but only/ overreaching ambition, which oerleaps itself/ And falls on thother (Act I, sc. 7). The soulfulness who gave them the original ambition was very similar, in both situations the meaning(a) other in their lives legion them to do good, but in the end only led them to evil. Kurtz began his trip with the intent to ethereal mission to civilize (Conrad, 70), he never had any purport to commit crime or kill, but over sentence he was driven to greed. He intended to make as much money as possible in as little time as he could but over time became more and more attached to the land and ...

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