Throughout the play, the witches have played a very significant role of influencing Macbeth to think and act evilly. Initially, Macbeth was a good man, a good soldier who is fiercely loyal to King Duncan and to his country, Scotland. …show more content…
These prophecies then provoked evil thoughts inside Macbeth’s mind. After Macbeth was told by Ross that Duncan had praised him with the title “Thane of Cawdor”, visions of murdering Duncan began to appear in his mind, “my thought, whose murder yet is but fantastical, shakes so my single state of man that function is smothered in surmise, and nothing is, but what is not”. Other horror thoughts includes, “this is a step on which I must fall down, or else o’erleap, for in my way it lies”. After Duncan announced that his son, “Prince of Cumberland”, will succeed him to throne, Macbeth realizes that he either have to get rid of Malcolm or give up …show more content…
She is manipulative and encourages Macbeth to achieve his ambition. She is portrayed as a strong, fiercely determined woman who, unlike her husband, shows no doubt of hesitation about killing Duncan. She acts quickly seeking to take advantage of the opportunity to kill Duncan, “O never shall sun that morrow see”, when Duncan decides to stay overnight at their castle. She also called upon “the spirits that tend on mortal thoughts to unsex me here”, so that she could be evil enough to commit the murder. When Macbeth preferred to be king “without my stir”, she attacked his manhood, saying, “When you broke this enterprise to me then you were a man and should you do this then you would be so much more the man”. Even though Lady Macbeth appears to be the evil mastermind behind the murdering, but in the end, it is also partly because of Macbeth’s own ambition to be king that encourages Macbeth to go into Duncan’s chamber and murders him. Besides Duncan, Macbeth has also murdered other people such as the grooms, Macduff’s family and also his best friend, Banquo. Due to that, he was later referred as a “tyrant”, a “butcher”, and a terrifying ruler of Scotland. His downfall is a result of his misuse of power, and Lady Macbeth is no longer involved. Therefore, only Macbeth himself shall be blamed for his own