Macbeth
In the Play, Macbeth, by William Shakespeare, the main character Macbeth is powerless against the final outcome of his life. Macbeth although, does have power over his reactions to the event presented by fate. These actions are influenced by his wife, Lady Macbeth, and the three weird sisters. Macbeth is powerless over the outcome of his life. He can only chose how he reacts to the set of chosen events. The witches who only have the power to for see the future inform Macbeth of his destiny (Act 1 scene 3 line 50). Macbeth would have become king regardless of his actions since it was his destiny. The actions following the predictions of Macbeth's future were under the power of Macbeth but influenced by himself, Lady Macbeth, and the predictions of the three sisters. Envy and ambition were the influential forces that worked on Macbeth's downfall. Envy is the sixth deadly sin, and is the desire for the possessions, position, or qualities of another. Macbeth's untempered envy lead to the killing of Duncan to obtain kingship for himself. Secondly, Macbeth's fear of others suspicions about the murder of Duncan, leads to the murder of Macduff's family, and Banquo. The guilt of these crimes eventually leads to the breakd
Other influences acted on Macbeth's abnormal actions. Such influential characters range from Lady Macbeth, and the three weird sisters. The letter from Macbeth acted as the three sisters acted on Macbeth. The letter inspired her envy and ambition for the empire (Jameson). Lady Macbeth influenced Macbeth through typical feminine manipulation. Due to her ambition and envy, she lived vicariously through Macbeth and desired to be hailed queen. To achieve he personal desires she questioned Macbeth manhood (Act 1 scene 7, l 35) and even took part in the cover up of the murders (act 2 scene 2 l 52). Her manipulation of Macbeth's decisions caused Macbeth to react towards the predictions of the three sisters in a way that he would not have. In Act one, scene five, line 18-20, Lady Macbeth describes the innocent personality of Macbeth. "Thou wouldst be great; art not without ambition; but without the illness should attend it. What thou wouldst highly, that wouldst highly; wouldst not play false, and yet wouldst wrongly win." This description of Macbeth suggests that Macbeth, with out exterior influences, would not have acted in the murderous ways that he did. Rather he would have let his destiny come to him holly. own of Macbeth and the rendezvous with destiny at Birnam Woods. Macbeth earliest sings of ambition become apparent in Act 1, scene 3, line 134. Macbeth conscience begins to fight the temptation to kill Duncan to seize the crown. In the end Macbeth's envy and ambition result in failure. This is best represented by the passage from, The Seven Deadly Sins. the younger comrades' eyes; and he begins to envy his former security." revolutionary. In the opinion of the established, all revolutionaries are actuated by position. You may for example if your Envy is all consuming. Become a The weird sisters do not play as a physical force on the actions of Macbeth, but as a mental force. "They should not interfere but to weave the fatal web, or unravel it; they ought to be the regrets of the fable and artificers of the catastrophe (Montagu). The sisters do not
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Approximate Word count = 1426
Approximate Pages = 6 (250 words per page double spaced)
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