Thursday, April 23, 2020
Macbeth In Shakespeare Essays - Characters In Macbeth,
  Macbeth In Shakespeare  Just so you know i made an 85 on this so you may want to look over it The  character Macbeth in Shakespeare's play Macbeth In 1606 William Shakespeare  (1564 - 1616) (Truex, 289), the Bard of Avon (Taylor, notes), wrote a tragedy,    Macbeth, for his new patron, James I (James VI of Scotland), following the death  of Queen Elizabeth (Truex, 289). The play is a tribute to James in the fact that  one of the characters, Banqou, was an ancestor of James(Truex, 299). The play  itself tells the story of a man (Macbeth), urged by his wife and foretold by  prophecy, who commits regicide in order to gain power. In Shakespeare's play    Macbeth, there are many characters with which undergo a character change. The  character that changes the most from beginning to end is the tragic hero,    Macbeth. At the beginning of the play Macbeth is seen as a courageous solider  who is loyal to the King but is corrupted from the witches prophecies and by his  and Lady Macbeth's ambition. This is because of the weakness of Macbeth's  character and the strong power of Lady Macbeth and how she is easily able to  influence him. Her strength motivates him at the start but after he realizes  what he has done it is himself that continues in his murderous, bloody path. In  the beginning of the play Macbeth is a strong solider who fights for the King  without mercy but his strive for ambition and his curious nature leads him to  the witched who give him a prophecy (I.1). Macbeth is a little ambitious at  first, but Lady Macbeth's far exceeds his and so she is able to get Macbeth to  agree with her to kill King Duncan. Macbeth still has a conscience at this stage  because he is very hesitant about killing the King but his weak nature over  comes him. He has a conscience throughout the entire play as the hallucinations  of the dagger (I.3.1-69) and the ghost of Banquo (III.4.) and his vivid  imagination see this and his constant worry also provokes him. Throughout the  play we see the character of Macbeth change not from just the way he thinks and  what we hear from the play, but from the actions he takes in the play, from  killing Banquo (III.3.), then having Lady Macduff and her children murdered,  shows the insecurity that was present in Macbeth. After the murder of Duncan,    Macbeth becomes quite paranoid and his first step of killing the guards is one  of many that Macbeth takes to secure himself. Macbeth is also very superstitious  and this is shown when he believes the prophecy the witches told him that    Banquo's offspring would become Kings. Towards the end of the play when    Macbeth's wife has dies and the battle is drawing closer Macbeth shows some good  that may have been. He wishes for a normal life for which he would have lived to  an honorable age but he recognizes that he has denied himself of this. Even when    Macbeth hears that the prophecy has become true of Birnam Wood coming to    Dunsinane, he rejects this idea and fights on until he realizes that Macduff  wasn't born in a natural birth but instead was "Untimely ripped" from  his mother's womb. When Macbeth realizes what he has done and how the witches  have tricked him but instead he realizes that it is useless and so he fights on  only to be slain. Macbeth can be summarized into a character although strong  physically he is very weak mentally and it is this weakness, which causes the  downfall and change of Macbeth. Other factors do however also contribute to this  change such as his wife whose ambition is very strong at first and is much more  stronger mentally than Macbeth but it is also Macbeth's ambition and his trust  in the witches which ultimately change him.    Bibliography    Macbeth, William Shakespeare. Elements of Literature, Sixith Course:    Literature of Britain. Megan Truex, et. al. Austin: Holt, Reinhart and Winston,    1997.    
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