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Richard III Hero's Journey

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This passage, which is the entirety of Act 5.1 of Richard III by William Shakespeare, takes place after Buckingham depleted his use as Richard’s bloody right hand and was seized by Richard for treason. Supposedly, Buckingham would be granted the earldom of Hereford and fulfill his desire for power, but the King had abandoned the pawn. Thus, Buckingham plotted to overthrow Richard out of fear and the addiction of power, but failed and got captured instead. Undoubtedly, Richard ordered him to be executed, and King Richard’s orders are followed without exceptions. The grim reaper knocks on Buckingham’s doors, and before his soul was taken, Buckingham undergoes a magnificent transformation ignited by the redemption of his conscience. He commences …show more content…
Using enumeration and polysyndeton, he listed Hastings and Edward’s children, the Woodvilles, King Henry, and Edward. Buckingham indicate that his victims have been “miscarrièd” in line 5, and in line 6 he refers to their murderers, which are Richard and himself, as “underhand corrupted foul injustice”. He does so because he finally realizes that the reasons behind the victims’ murders were immoral and unjust, thus making them miscarrièd, and the murderers, himself included, are sneaky, dishonest murderers who would do anything for power. In line 7-9, “If that your moody, discontented souls...even for revenge mock my destruction”, Shakespeare utilises an apostrophe and have Buckingham begging the souls to mock his “destruction”, as if he’s merely a thing who does not deserve the word “death”, if they are watching. Also, personification was used when he describe the souls “moody” and “discontented” to demonstrate how Buckingham believes he’s actually talking to their souls and he is truly guilty of his own wrongs. With such abundance of remorse and sympathy Buckingham feels towards his victims, it is evident that Buckingham’s long-gone conscience have …show more content…
He completely awoke his conscience from its slumber, and is aware that it was his own villainous acts have brought him the fate of a typical villain. With such a dramatic transformation, Buckingham accompanies it with his own dramatic words. An anaphora is used in line 13,16, and 18 with “This is the..day”, emphasizing and intensifying the sense of irony Buckingham feels. Who would have thought the false vows’ consequences would come true? Buckingham promised King Edward that if he was ever “found false to his children and wife’s allies”, he would have death falling upon him. He also recalls another broken promise by commencing with “this is the day” again. The vow made was “fall by the false faith of him whom most I trusted” and it became reality once Richard the false friend betrayed him. The sentence “whom most I trusted” is rich with bitterness and it can be interpreted by the hyperbaton used, highlighting the disbelieve Buckingham feels about Richard’s betrayal. Then, he uses an epizeuxis of “This, this All Souls’ Day” in line 18, dramatizing it, as if it is the grand finale of his “fearful soul”. Next, Buckingham relived how he thought he jested with the “All-Seer” (20), or an allusion of God. He realizes that it is impossible to toy with God, thus his punishment arrives and he uses the juxtaposition “given in earnest what I begged in

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