In Shakespeares’ classic play The Tragedy of Macbeth, we see various contrasting emotions and moods of Macbeth. We learn that Macbeth’s character is very complex and double-sided throughout the scene that shows his two-sided feelings. The real question is to kill or not to kill King Duncan to gain the throne. This scene takes place in Act 1, Scene 7 in Inverness; Macbeth’s castle. Throughout the soliloquy, Macbeth evolves his moods towards the murder as his thoughts bounce back and forth. Macbeth’s personality is very influenced by his desires and motives. Macbeth is also very aware of possible flaws in his tentative plan. Macbeth’s thoughts and moods change through a variety of repetitions, euphemisms, lists and imagery. Therefore, as Macbeth…
We are usually held accountable for the actions that we decide to take. Several times we are influenced to make those decisions which, usually are influenced by someone else. The outcomes of these actions might turn out positive or against us and destruct us entirely. Macbeth takes many decisions over the course of the book. Some might define them as good and many might see them as atrocious. The Thane of Glamis(Macbeth) encounters the three witches one day; they informed Macbeth that he will have an exceptional future, a future where he can be king. Macbeth’s greed and ambition strike him and take over as soon as he hears present king; King Duncan is granting the throne to Malcolm, his son. Not knowing how else to proceed, he sends a letter to his passionate wife about his encounter with the witches. Lady Macbeth- the very determined character that she is, manipulates Macbeth into taking the throne of king by killing all who comes in the middle.…
Like snakes, the witches of Macbeth poison Macbeth's mind and spread illness upon him. The tragic events in Macbeth are not primarily Macbeth's or Lady Macbeth's fault but rather the responsibility of the witches. They infect Macbeth with wickedness, send evil spirits to Lady Macbeth, and manipulate Macbeth with ambiguous prophecies. Shunned by society and living in solitude, these three weird sisters hide in the background using Macbeth as their puppet. Unbeknownst to all, Macbeth was not the root cause of the tragic events and time will never be free as long as these witches have the ability to influence whomever they choose. Perhaps that is the reason instability continues in the throne for the years that follow.…
At the start of the play Macbeth is brave and loyal and displays many of the attributes of a great king. However after conversing with the three witches his state of mind goes on a downward spiral eventually ending in his demise. His thirst for power and wealth cause him to act foolishly and with haste rather than waiting to see if the witches’ predictions come true. It is clear from Macbeths reaction to King Duncan telling Malcom that he will be Prince of Cumberland that Macbeths desires have already started to take a toll on his mind ‘That is a step on which I must fall down, or else o'erleap, For in my way it lies.’ (I. IV. 48). This clearly shows that ambition is taking away Macbeths rational thoughts and he is choosing to act without thought towards the consequences and is only focused on his goal of becoming…
In the play Macbeth, Macbeth receives a prophecy from three witches that tell him that he will one day become king. Macbeth then sets out to make the prophecy a reality by committing regicide and taking the king’s life, then becoming king himself. After he becomes king, he begins to go mad with guilt and paranoia from what he has done, yet he still commits more murders in order to keep his throne. The country is thrown into chaos after the death of the king, and Macbeth does little to nothing to keep his country in order due to his own personal issues, which causes a rebellion, led…
Macbeth was known as a loyal and mostly honored man in the first beginning. The witches predicted great things for him. From reading the book he seemed so great. Throughout the scenes he starts to change and act different. Macbeth has this mindset to kill Duncan so that he can be king. He wants power and is very greedy for power and was willing to kill him to get it. It made the reader vision him in a more selfish and hunger for greed way.…
Macbeth's complete self-destruction originated with his encounter with the witches. In the beginning of the play, he is a soldier with good intentions and no aspiration for harm. At this point, Macbeth has not yet been influenced by the witches and the ambition they provoked. As soon as he meets the witches his demise begins. Being truly interested in the witches' predictions, Macbeth quickly rises in power and begins to neglect his conscience. The witches seem to have total control over his mind and his behavior. They trigger Macbeth's destructive actions, which ultimately become his habit to kill. Macbeth's wrongdoing did not originate in his mind and soul, but rather resulted from him being a victim of circumstance and misfortune, and therefore, he deserves sympathy.…
Macbeth has made his decision to kill the King and take the crown as his own. Inspired in part by his own ambition, the decision to murder Duncan is aided by the prophecies of the Witches as well as the insistent urging of his wife. He is wracked with guilt over what he is about to do, as his mind races with thoughts and emotions of such an evil action. He begins to hallucinate and sees a bloody dagger in the air, which will be his instrument of murder. He goes on to comment on the wickedness of the world, thoughts which are interrupted by the ringing of the bell, a signal from Lady Macbeth that Duncan's guards are drugged and sleeping and he states. Shakespeare's Macbeth is notable for hallucinations, terrifying dreams, witches, prophecies and all of the combining forces of nature which lead to chaos and murder in the gloomy countryside of Scotland.…
Macbeth changes from doubtful and gullible, to certain and controlling through the simplicity of murder, terror, and manipulation. In the beginning of the play, Macbeth is doubtful about murdering Duncan. He tells Lady Macbeth “we will proceed no further in this business” (1.7), yet she manipulates him by saying “When you durst do it, then you were a man”. (1.7) Lady Macbeth is the initial driving ambition between them, because she insists on accelerating the King’s death so that Macbeth might rule longer. Macbeth might have been content to wait for the King to die of natural causes, but he was too weak to resist his desire to be powerful, and he didn’t know what it meant to murder a man in cold blood. His first murder haunted him for the remainder of his life, but this experience taught him how to seek for his desire, even if it meant to commit a crime, and it stimulated his early hunger for safety, witch could only be accomplished through forced control.…
Macbeth is significantly affected. Macbeth interacts with Duncan only a minimal amount before Duncan 's death; Macbeth 's attitude towards him changes very rapidly. Before Macbeth hears the witches ' first prophecy, he is very close to Duncan, and would never even think of doing something against him. When the thought of murdering Duncan crosses his mind immediately after he finds that he has just been named Thane of Cawdor Macbeth 's personality begins to change. At first he doesn 't want to murder Duncan, but with the helpful persuasion of his overly ambitious wife, Macbeth agrees to kill Duncan. However, as the time to murder Duncan rapidly approaches Macbeth questions his motives. Macbeth gives several justified reasons as to why he should not murder Duncan; one being that he is a great king and is loved by all the people. Another reason is that Macbeth is his kinsman and his subject. Once again Lady Macbeth uses her persuasive techniques and convinces her husband that killing Duncan will only advance his chances of acquiring the throne. He is firmly seated in his beliefs that killing Duncan is the right thing to do-until he performs the murder. He is so horrified by this act that for a moment he forgets where he is or whom he is with. We learn from this murder that Macbeth truly had faith in the king and was very loyal, but under the forces of his wife 's persuasion and his own vaulting ambition, he is put in the evil frame of mind for just long enough to kill Duncan. This murder does permanently alter him from his moral state of mind, and he soon does not feel much remorse for murdering Duncan. Before he murders…
At the outset of the play, Macbeths encounters the witches who predict he will become "Thane of Cowdor" and that he too, will one day be king. Nevertheless, the witches do not oblige Macbeth to ultimately commit his actions. However, they do place within Macbeth a sense of wonder and optimism. The three witches intruded upon a part of man, which that he is gullible. Macbeth being gullible caused his wonder and brought forth a feeling of possibility. This is evident, when Macbeth tells his wife of what he has experienced. Upon revealing what was told to him, Lady Macbeth further on, appeals to Macbeth to take action when King Duncan comes to visit. Lady Macbeth urges her husband to fulfill his obligation and kill King Duncan. However, it is apparent that Macbeth is hesitant of such action and is at first unwilling to go forth with the plan. Once again Lady Macbeth alludes to the witches vision and with that, lusts upon the possible gains. The plan is executed and Macbeth becomes King. upon the vacancy of the throne. The witches' vision is obtained, through the natural human sense of possibility and lust.…
Macbeth is a man of action; he often lets his impulsive thoughts take control of his actions, enabling evil to find an opening in his mind to seep in. In the beginning of the play, Macbeth receives a prophecy from the Weird Sisters that he would become King of Scotland. Compared to the skeptical reaction of Banquo, who questioned the creditability of the witches, Macbeth’s reaction was rather contented. His mind immediately thought of different ways of achieving the prophecy. “My thoughts, whose murder yet is but fantastical, Shakes so my single state of man” (I, iii, 151-152) Shakespeare used the word “murder” for Macbeth to describe his own thoughts, this means that Macbeth, by this point already has some implication on how the prophecy would come true, in this case, something that would take the form of bloodshed; something evil. Maybe the thought came too fast, Macbeth was not able to grasp the full…
The witches are very weird sisters and weird things.In the book there is a picture of the witches and they are very ugly. As I read macbeth I found that no matter where they go a storm or bad weather follows.They are the only people that have supernatural powers. They are more powerful than Macbeth because they do anything they please to do.…
In act 1, scene 1, the three witches speak of meeting with victorious Macbeth upon a hill after the battle has ended. This implies that the witches can see into the future. However, they also talk about causing harm to a sailor because his wife would not share her chestnuts with one of the witches; saying that "Though his bark cannot be lost/Yet it shall be tempest tossed". They plan on causing unrelenting storms while the sailor is at sea so that he will have to stay awake day and night to keep his ship afloat. The lack of sleep with eventually cause his death. This shows that the power(s) of the witches are limited because they can control things such as the weather, and see into the future, but cannot outright cause death upon a human…
Macbeth goes through a lot of different emotions throughout Shakespeare's play Macbeth. He's controlled by three evil witches that what him to do the wrong thing. The witches tell him to kill people just so he can have the throne and become king. In Shakespeare's play Macbeth, the three witches play a huge role in the story by influencing Macbeth to kill in order to be king, by only coming out durning certain parts of the play dealing with some sort of tragedy, and how they can control Macbeth.…