Macbeth and Banquo met them on their travels. Thane of Glamis is satisfied with his position, until the three witches tell him, "hail to thee, Thane of Cawdor, thou shalt be King hereafter." (I, iii.). When they reach their destination, King Duncan actually gave Macbeth the position of Thane of Cawdor, and start contemplating of how the rest of the prophecy will come true. In Polanski and Kirosawa's versions of Macbeth in the films, Banquo and Macbeth actually laughed at the prophecy, emphasizing on how they thought it was silly. I do not believe that the witches are the reason for what happened to Macbeth; they had a prophecy and simply told it to him. Some say that the three witches were the reason for the start of everything, and there was no true prophecy, but a counter-argument would be that they knew Macbeth will become Thane of Cawdor. Later on, Macbeth tells his wife what had happened by writing her letter. Macbeth learns that the only way he can become King is to kill Duncan, and get rid of the heir, and also prevent Banquo’s son from gaining access to the throne. Lady Macbeth begins to consider what "impedes thee from the golden round" (I, v). She desperately wants her Macbeth to be King and she calls upon the "aids of sprits"(I, v) to help her in getting Macbeth to kill Duncan. There is a huge juxtaposition between Macbeth's reaction and Lady Macbeth's reaction. She seems more bloodthirsty and is very keen for…