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What is the “double trust” (The Tragedy of Macbeth, Act I, Scene vii, line 12) that Macbeth would be breaking if he kills Duncan?

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Answer:

King Duncan trusts Macbeth. King Duncan trusts Macbeth to protect him because he his is subject, and Macbeth believes that he should protect him for being kinsman. He also considers himself the King's host, meaning he should be trying to get people that try to kill the King away, not actually "bear[ing] the knife [him]self", or being the one to murder him. Macbeth believes that the King is a good one, someone who is humble and virtuous. For these reasons, Macbeth does not want to kill him and to do so would gibe Macbeth a lot of guilt.

Step-by-step explanation:

Edg2020

(this is what I said. change the wording)

User Trauer
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Macbeth had several impediments to assassinate Duncan, King of Scotland. The double trust he would be braking is that first he considered the King Duncan as his "kinsman and his subject" so he had to protect him. Second, Macbeth was hosting Duncan in his castle so he had to keep it away from any threat as an implicit compromise instead of being himself the killer. In addition, Macbeth thought that King Duncan was a noble, virtuous and free of corruption person, so his dead would make people feel very sad which filled Macbeth with a lot of guilt even though ambition made him doubt.

User Heena
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