“Sleep that knits up the raveled sleeve of care, the death of each day’s life, sore labor’s bath, balm of hurt minds great nature’s second course, chief nourishes in life’s feast.”
In this quote, Macbeth is comparing sleep to a "sleeve of care", "the death of each day's life", "great nature's second course", and to "chief nourished in life's feast." These are all examples of metaphors that Shakespeare has used to show importance to these specific lines. Macbeth is trying to say that only the innocent are allowed to sleep and he no longer believes that he is innocent because what he did was bad. The audience, with the help of metaphors and a good actor, would see how Macbeth and sleep no longer go together, hence, making Macbeth guilty and evil.
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