 Studying Macbeth. Here's how you can analyse that five scene three. The scene opens with Macbeth being really irritated. He says, bring me no more reports. Let them fly all. In other words, he speaks using Cezura to say that he's tired of hearing bad news. Everyone can just fly away. In other words, everyone can run away and betray him. Macbeth is really stressed and paranoid. However, he remembers the third apparition which told him that he can't be defeated until Great Burnham Wood moves to the High Johnstown Hill. He uses this to reassure himself that he will be absolutely fine. He shows his trust in the apparitions by saying the spirits that know all mortal consequences. This hyperbole emphasises that Macbeth is still really naive because he believes that the witches and the apparitions are there to help him and he won't be defeated. The stage directions show us another servant entering and he tells Macbeth that there are 10,000 soldiers that are marching against him to fight him. Macbeth then turns to a soldier called Satan and tells him that he's really stressed. Macbeth then says, I have lived long enough and Shakespeare uses Cezura as well as alliteration to show Macbeth is starting to have some doubts. He's wondering whether he's going to survive this final battle. Yet Macbeth speaks in hyperbole here to basically say that even if he might be defeated, he's going to fight to the very end. The doctor then enters to tell Macbeth that Lady Macbeth is troubled with thick coming fancies. In other words, Lady Macbeth is mentally ill and there's not very much he can do for her. Yet Macbeth arrogantly dismisses what the doctor says and he tells him to cure her. It's clear that Macbeth doesn't really care that much about his wife anymore. Macbeth then dismisses the doctor and he decides to wear his armor and to go out to the battlefield showing that he's obsessed with winning. He's more obsessed with the war than even with his wife's health.