Sunday, October 13, 2019
evilmac Shakespeares Macbeth - The Main Theme of Evil :: Macbeth essays
     Macbeth: The Main Theme of Evil          William Shakespeare's "Macbeth" is a play in which a man by the name of    Macbeth, who is presented as a mature man with an uncertain character. At the    beginning of the story, Macbeth's character was a character with strong morals.    As the play went on though, Macbeth's morality lessened immensely. After killing    Duncan he was very paranoid and feared the consequences that would arise. He    knew what he had done wrong. In comparing Duncan's murder with his best friend,    Banquo's murder, He was much more relaxed after Banquo's death. His character    shifted throughout the play. Macbeth, at this point did anything to keep his    crown, even so far as to getting killed for it! I think that some sort of    anatomy of evil was responsible for Macbeth's as well as other characters'    wrongdoings in the story. Each character in the story had to either fight it or    give into it. In Macbeth's case, he fought it and lost, and therefore, gave into    it. The play makes several points about the nature of evil. One point it makes    is that evil is not normal in human nature. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth have to    sort of "trick" themselves into murdering Duncan. First, Lady Macbeth has to beg    evil spirits to tear all human feeling from her ("...spirits / That tend on    mortal thoughts..." [Act I, Scene V, Lines 41-42] "Stop up th' accessand passage    to remorse / That no compunctious visitings of nature / Shake my fell    purpose..."[Act I, Scene V, Lines 45-47]) and then she has to make Macbeth    ignore his own conscience ("Yet do I fear thy nature; It is too full o' th' milk    of human kindness To catch the nearest way" [Act I, Scene V, Lines 17-19]) Once    she has seen her husband's ambition has been inflamed, she is willing to risk    anything to help him get the crown. It was as if she were taking her heart out    to make her husband king. She has been very successful of emptying herself of    human feeling. By the end of the play, both characters have been destroyed from    within. Fear and guilt drive Lady Macbeth mad; Macbeth sees life as an empty,    meaningless charade. (His famous speech upon hearing of Lady Macbeth's suicide:    "Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow..."[Act V, Scene V, Lines 17-28]) This    speech is less an expression of grief than it is a speech about the meaningless    of life.         The second point is that evil disrupted nature itself. In nature, there is a    time and a place for everything.  					    
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