In this article, it talks about how Shakespeare uses some sort of trick in the play which made it difficult for the readers to know what was being talked about. It really just talks about the complexity of blame in Macbeth was. The Tragedy of Evil talks about the real tragedy that happened to Macbeth and his ambition. The qualities that Macbeth shows are through his goals and temptations. It also talked about how Macbeth started off as a good man but changed so quickly for the lust of power. He changes so quickly because of the news that he got from the witches which made his wife Lady Macbeth convince him of not letting anything getting in his way from achieving his goals. Macbeth was seen as a good guy when he is a very successful and loving …show more content…
Additionally, the article had also spoken about how Macbeth was very sinful through his actions such as all the killing he has done throughout the play and he sees it as a okay thing. His imagination made him see all the implications of his evil act in a very horrible way. His imaginations implicated the actions he is going to commit to. His ambition which changed him to evil, show how that the good in him has been destroyed and left him to grow more evil. But as Macbeth changes throughout the play we see that he wants more information about him which led him to brutal things such as killing Macduff’s family. Another important thing was that when evil is let loose, it leads the person to their doom. One last thing, the article talked about was the fact that the desire for power can lead to many things going wrong and bad. In the following page, the author’s point of view will be …show more content…
But then again it is a play written by William Shakespeare. I think that the lust of power is a very dangerous thing because it can cause people to do things that they will regret later on and it change who you are. It also leads to things not ending like for Macbeth, he was killed by Macduff. I think that the witches and Lady Macbeth should be the ones to blame for everything because the witches told Macbeth that he would be the King of Scotland and Thane of Cawdor. The news had also been brought to Lady Macbeth which made her come up with a plan to kill Duncan who is the king because she wants her husband to be king and she does this because she loves him. But she knows that Macbeth won’t follow up on her plan so she tries to convince him and succeeds which made Macbeth change and let the evil take over. That is when it all started but I also think that Macbeth can be one to blame for his downfall because he can make his own choices but decided to listen to his wife which led him to the path of evil. Another opinion of mine was that Macbeth should have resisted from choosing the path of evil because it would have made him look like a better person and it wouldn't have led him to his doom. The witches shouldn't have told Lady Macbeth about the news because it made her come up with a plan to
Shakespeare's play Macbeth shows the roots of all evil, our own human nature. The play is centered on the coexistence of good and evil. Macbeth, unlike any other Shakespeare play has the protagonist convert to evil. In the beginning of the play, Macbeth is shown as a hero in the Scottish army, that is ironic because Macbeth defeats a traitor and he himself becomes one later. Macbeth knows his place in the world. He is fully capable of distinguishing between right and wrong. Macbeth purposely disregards his own moral judgment to rise to power which is again ironic and goes against his own beliefs. Macbeth stands as a symbol for Satan's sin of ambition. Like Satan, Macbeth's thirst for power and ambition drives him to commit evil.Contrary to
William Shakespeare’s Macbeth is a tragedy in which the main characters are obsessed by the desire for power. Macbeth’s aspiration for power blinds him to the ethical implications of his dreadful acts. The more that Shakespeare’s Macbeth represses his murderous feelings, the more he is haunted by them. By analyzing his hallucinations it is possible to trace his deteriorating mental state and the trajectory of his ultimate fall. Throughout the play Macbeth is never satisfied with himself. He feels the need to keep committing crime in order to keep what he wants most: his kingship. The harder Macbeth tries to change his fate the more he tends to run into his fate. His ambition and struggle for power was Macbeth’s tragic flaw in the play.
With Lady Macbeth and Macbeth completing the murder, the people of Scottland need a new king and with the kings sons gone there was only one other person. Macbeth was finally king and had gotten the power he wanted. Corruption of power doesn’t stop once you have done what was needed to get there. Once someone is corrupted they will most likely always be that way. For Macbeth he was corrupt of power till the day he died. As the play goes on, Macbeth does not stop after he acheived the title as king, he began to start killing the people who posed a threat towards him losing the crown. For example, in act 3 it says, “ And with him- To leave no rubs nor botches in the work- Fleance, his son, that keeps him company, Whose absence is no less material to me Than is his father’s, must embrace the fate Of that dark hour. Resolve yourselves apart. I’ll come to you anon” (3.1.138-144). Macbeth knows that the prophecies the witches told him said that Banquos sons will become king and Macbeth feels threatened. Macbeth sends murders to kill Banquo and his son so they won’t be on the way. Power that corrupts even the nicest people, can change them into something ruthless and can make you kill some of the people you are closest too. Being corrupt with power wil also bring alomg guilt and behavioral changes. For
In this world, one of the strongest human drives seems to be the desire for power. In the play Macbeth by William Shakespeare, Thane Macbeth seeks to gain power over Scotland. Through Macbeth’s search for power, he must choose between what is morally right or his inner motives. Macbeth gains power over others through the murders of King Duncan, Banquo, and Macduff’s entire family along with his servants. After each murder, Macbeth becomes more confident in his search to gain power.
From the moment Macbeth answers the play, it appears that he is always making immoral decisions. This drives the audience to believe that Macbeth is an evil character and regrets nothing that he does throughout the play. However, Macbeth is not inherently evil; rather he is driven to make these immoral and evil decisions because of the other characters in the play, such as the witches and his wife. The first time the audience is introduced to Macbeth, it is through indirect characterization from a soldier that witnessed Macbeth fighting on the battle field.
Success is something earned not given. In the play Macbeth, the protagonist Macbeth is the Thane of Glamis. Macbeth is led to evil thoughts by three witches he meets after the victory over Macdonald. The witches prophesied Macbeth would become the Thane of Cawdor and soon become the King of Scotland. Macbeth begins to contemplate the killing of King Duncan to fulfill the prophecy the witches bestowed upon him.
MacBeth: Evil or Victim of Outside Forces Evil or victim of his fate, which one was MacBeth? He was both. “MacBeth” is a play written by William Shakespeare about a man known as MacBeth who was once revered for his bravery, turning into a traitorous tyrant. MacBeth was fueled by his ambition and outside forces such as the witches and his wife. MacBeth easily could have refused to kill the king and ignored his wife, but he chose to go down his path of evil.
This contradicts to the actions of lady Macbeth after the tyranny that Macbeth causes. The crazy state of Lady Macbeth, which eventually caused her death, could have been non-existent if she hadn’t been the motivation and just as much the driving force behind her husband’s ruthless leadership. On the other hand, there are some characters that are also somewhat responsible for their lack of involvement, or failure to react quickly to the suspicious murder of King Duncan.
Many of people have heard the tragedy of Macbeth by William Shakespeare. The story revolves on a sequence of misfortunate events that take place when Macbeth makes immoral decisions to be king. In the play, Shakespeare shows how power can cause corruption in a human’s brain. Macbeth himself was not a very confident person, though he had a kind soul to begin with, he was easily influenced and gullible. Through the prophecies of the evil beings, an insignificant seed was planted in Macbeth. That spark of wealth and fortune caused the tyrant within him to awake. Which eventually lead to his fatal death. His ambition lead him to murder, go insane and become very superstitious.
The definition of evil is profound immorality, wickedness, and depravity, especially when regarded as a supernatural force. The readers see these qualities in the main character, Macbeth. This play, written by William Shakespeare, starts off by portraying Macbeth as a hero who helped to win the battle for Scotland; this is the first impression of Macbeth. Macbeth is not the only character that readers see profound immorality in; evil is seen in the people around Macbeth as he makes his journey to the throne.
Macbeth’s mental and moral deterioration throughout the play engages the audience illustrating how guilt overwhelms his conscience He believes he hears voices crying “Macbeth has murdered sleep” this demonstrates how he is battling against his morals and his ambition. His good qualities are battling his bad thoughts and this is the main reason for his mental downfall which makes for a deeply engaging plot. Macbeth goes from being a man of bravery, strength, honour yet he slowly loses these qualities. He once believed that killing a good man was an evil, un-worthy thing to do yet by the end of the play he is killing the people he once had close relationships with to get himself out of the mess that was dragging him deeper into despair and tragedy. This process is enthralling for the audience who cannot resist watching him go to any length to save himself as his morals go into deep decline. Ambition has completely taken over him in the soliloquy in which he states; “I have no spur to prick the sides of my intent, but only Vaulting ambition, which o’erleap itself and falls on the other.” In this instance Macbeth is interesting because he realises that the only thing that is making him want to kill Duncan is
The witches cannot be blamed, nor Lady Macbeth, for Macbeth himself acting on his ambition and making his desires become reality. When the witches tell Macbeth of his future, his first thought is how murdering Duncan would be "fantastical". This shows that Macbeth is prepared to kill simply to climb the hierarchy. Although the witches give predictions and Lady Macbeth persuades him, neither have actual control over Macbeth. He recognises that he is "so far" in blood but instead of changing his ways, he decides that it would be "tedious" and pointless. He realises after killing many people, he can never go back to the man he was before. His ambition continues to drive him forward and he embraces evil. Macbeth chooses not to tell his wife about his plans and slowly begins to cut off connection to her. Even when she dies, he shows little remorse by saying "she should have died hereafter". This demonstrates that he has little human emotion left. By the end of the play, Macbeth has fallen from a hero to a
Lady Macbeth goes about as a person of evil motives and actions throughout the play. She is included strongly in Macbeth's issues to verify that he does what is important for him to become. At the point when figuring out that Duncan had planned to visit their castle, Lady Macbeth perceives this as a prime open door for Macbeth to take on the position of King: " Only look up clear; To alter favour ever is to fear. Leave all the rest to me " (I.V.69-71). Without Lady Macbeth's tirelessness in seeing the prediction through it is likely that the killings and the resulting confusion that takes after would never have happened. The three witches planted the thought into Macbeth's brain and Lady Macbeth took that temptation and made it actuality. Lady Macbeth is essential to the evil set in motion by the witches in light of the fact that she completes what the witches began. Lady Macbeth assumes the responsibility
The play examines the effects of evil on Macbeth’s character and on his subsequent moral behavior. The later murders flow naturally out of the first. Evil breeds evil because Macbeth, to protect himself and consolidate his position, is forced to murder again (Harbage, 1963). Successively, he kills Banquo, attempts to murder Fleance, and brutally exterminates Macduff’s family. As his crimes increase, Macbeth’s freedom seems to decrease, but his moral responsibility does not. His actions become more cold-blooded as his options disappear. Shakespeare does not allow Macbeth any moral excuses. The dramatist is aware of the notion that any action performed makes it more likely that the person will perform other such actions. The operation of this phenomenon is apparent as Macbeth finds it increasingly easier to rise to the gruesome occasion. However, the dominant inclination never becomes a total determinant of behavior, so Macbeth does not have the excuse of loss of free will. It does however become ever more difficult to break the chain of events that are rushing him toward moral and physical destruction.
Evil is a destructive force; it causes harm to those who embrace it and their victims. In Shakespeare 's Macbeth, the protagonist Macbeth and Lady Macbeth fall into the hands of evil. Evil is what drives people to commit unnatural actions of destruction. Macbeth succumbs to evil through his fatal flaw, greed, and it causes him to disrupt the chain of being. When Macbeth willingly murders, massacres, lies and deceives, he loses his heath and sanity. Evil corrupts everything it touches, and Macbeth decides to be evil 's servant. But, when Macbeth embraces evil, it corrupts him, and it ultimately destroys him as well. Lady Macbeth is a victim of Macbeth 's fatal flaw, since she is drawn in, and becomes greedy