Thursday, May 30, 2019

Macbeth Was Responsible For His Own Downfall Essay -- essays research

Macbeth is the driving rage behind Macbeths downfallLady Macbeth? The driving force behind Macbeths downfall? Certainly not. Macbeth was completely and solely responsible for all the acts of great evil which were to lead to his downfall, and to even suggest the blame discharge be shifted on his wife is ludicrous.      From his very first meeting with the witches, Macbeths mind became instantly plagued with thoughts of murder and treachery. The guilty start that Banquo noticed      "Good sir, why do you start, and seem to fear      Things that do sound so fair?"showed us that the thought of murder was already at the back of his mind. This showed us that Macbeth could not have been as honourable and trustworthy as people believed him to be, given that if he had had but a shred of integrity, murder would have been the last thing on his mind. The witches cannot corrupt the virtuous (like Banquo), they can work only o n the evil that they already find in their victims mind. At this point, Macbeth (and everyone else), was not aware of this evil inside of him, which is why he was so horrified by the hideous imaginings that spring to mind. He was afraid of speaking of his "black and mystical desires" openly, even to himself. For this reason, he sends a letter to his wife, explaining the situation, hoping that the thought of murder would cross her mind, and he wont have to be the one to bring it up. On receiving the letter, Lady Macbeths first thought (as Macbeth had hoped it would be) was one of murder. She was just as ambitious, if not more so, than her husband, so much so that she would do anything, even conjure up to commit murder, to get what she wanted in the end. However, she was not an evil woman, which is why she matt-up the need to call on the powers of darkness to aid her in what she was some to do                &n bsp   "Come, you spirits          That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here,          And fill me from the crown to the toe top-full          Of direst cruelty make thick my blood &q... ...ad. Earlier, she had dismissed the social occasion of Duncans murder, but now she admits to herself what she knew all along, that     "All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand" In the end, she can no longer repugn with the guilt, and in the words of Malcolm in the last scene of the play.     "Who, as tis thought, by self and violent hands      Took of her life-"It seems now that Lady Macbeth must have been slight strong, and not as evil as Macbeth. When she took part in the planning of the murder of Duncan, she felt so guilty in the long run that she felt she had to take her own life. However, Macbeth has performed crimes that are a lot worse than the crime his wife committed, but he has not decided to do anything as forceful as taking his own life.It is in Act 5 scene 5 that Macbeth shows us the true extent of his insanity. He has lost the capacity to regain fear (for his inevitable death), and grief (for his dead wife). It is in Act 5 Scene 7 that Macbeths life comes to an abrupt end, and no one grieves him. He died a tyrant and a murderer, all through his own fault.

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