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Macbeth is obsessed with obtaining power, in any way possible. After hearing from the three witches that he will be King, his mind becomes overwhelmed and all he can focus on is taking the throne from the present King, Duncan. “I have done the deed…” (2.2.15). In this quote, Macbeth explains to his wife that he has murdered the King. He starts to go insane soon after he commits this sin. Once the King’s sons find out of his death, they flee to distant countries, leaving Macbeth as the King. Although most of Macbeth’s murders are driven by power, he requests killings that do not benefit him in any way at the same time.…
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The lust Macbeth has for power has deteriorated his mind and transformed him into a liar. To elaborate, the significant event in Act II was the assassination of Duncan, the king of Scotland, by Macbeth. Macbeth committed this murder to seize the throne for himself, as predicted by the Witches. Before he crossed that bridge and burned it, Macbeth was a loyal and powerful member of the Scottish nobility. His morals and state of mind were in good shape, however, when he thinks he can be king, the desire for power overwhelms him. Up to the point of the murder Macbeth’s state of mind deteriorates due to the abandonment of loyalty and his morals. This is shown when Macbeth is waiting for Lady Macbeth’s signal that Duncan and his guards have…
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Shakespeare wrote many works of literature that covered many different topics. In Macbeth, one of his main topics was ambition. Macbeth was driven by ambition causing him to commit his first murder. He then begins to commit other crimes including murder again in order to cover up for his other crimes. Eventually, Macbeth is seen as a tyrant that loses his life for it. We assume that Lady Macbeth also goes crazy but in reality she is plotting and calculating. Her greed and conscious begin to weigh heavy on her and she ends up committing suicide. Proof of this is when Lady Macbeth says, “It is too full o’ the milk of human kindness to catch the nearest way. Thou wouldst be great, Art not without ambition, but without the illness should accompany it.” (N.p., n.d. Web Dec 2015). Lady Macbeth wants Macbeth to become king so badly that she pushes him to commit murder so that he may become king. He ends up giving in to their ambition by killing Duncan after Lady Macbeth belittles him and makes him believe she will leave him. Although…
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Although Macbeth possesses admirable valor and honorable loyalty in the beginning of the play, his greatest asset—his ambition—contaminates his judgment and causes him to drive the dagger into King Duncan. Ambition is a double-edged sword which eventually slices Macbeth and stabs the beloved king. Macbeth’s ambition assists him in gaining the Thane of Cawdor and the Thane of Glamis titles, but even these superior positions did not fulfill his hunger for power. Even though King Duncan believes Macbeth was the most trustworthy solider in all of Scotland, Macbeth’s ulterior motives reveal he is simply focused on power. Macbeth’s “thriftless ambition” and fixation on gaining more authority is “'[against] nature” as it causes him to commit heinous…
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In the plotline of Macbeth, we find that the main theme can be expressed as wretched destruction through the selfish ambitions of others that seem to have no moral constraints. These ideas are most evident and powerful in the book’s two main characters – Macbeth, a Scottish general who is not naturally inclined to commit violent deeds, while deep down, has a strong desire to advance in status and power. As a result of his lingering evil intentions, he kills Duncan against his original moral judgments to quench his thirst for power, and is later tormented by guilt and paranoia regarding the violent act of murder he committed. Toward the end of the play, he boasts out in…
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Ambition is the trail to treachery. In the interchange between Macbeth and his lady, in William Shakespeare’s Macbeth (Act 2. 2. 1-95), their combined aspiration of becoming the uppermost royalty leads to a disloyal scheme, regarding Duncan’s death. Promoting her sinful ideas, she continues to tease the hopeful future, employing Macbeth’s interest in the plot through her cajoling and manipulation. Without these ambitions, an unlawful ruse of such extremities could never be entirely motivated.…
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How can one person go from being a very strong hero to an unstable, distrusted person in a short period of time? Some of us look at books or plays to determine, what is happening or if the author is extraordinary compared to others. Have you ever thought about looking at a specific character and pictured the change in them? In Macbeth many characters go through drastic changes, but there is one in particular that really stands out. This is the character of Macbeth.…
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Macbeth’s over ambition is a very dangerous trait, it becomes the cause of his downfall and the reason for all his mistakes.Macbeth's ambition is driven by two main things, first the prophecy given by the witches and secondly his wife Lady Macbeth. Macbeth does not think about becoming king until the witches tell him the prophecy, leading him to think of ways to become king, coming to the reluctant conclusion that he must kill Duncan. As for Lady Macbeth she pushes him over the edge by saying things that cause him to forget the fear and guilt and commit the act of murder. Once Macbeth kills the king he began to kill anyone that gets in his way or tries…
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There is a fine line between ambition and greed; a line that Macbeth overstepped tremendously. After being prophesied by the three witches that he is to become the Thane of Cawdor and king, Macbeth, almost instantaneously, considered the possibility of killing King Duncan. Of course, like any human being, Macbeth weighed up the odds and realized he was in a good position already; after leading an army to victory, he was well respected by those around him. In addition to weighing up the odds, he also understands that it was not necessary for him to tamper with what is already destined to become his fate. Stating, “If chance will have me king, why, chance may crown me without my stir.” (Act 1, Scene 3, Page 7) Nevertheless, Macbeth’s greed for more power and nobility matched with his volatile ambitions, caused him to contemplate murdering King Duncan and later…
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He first is a loyal to the King and he respects him entirely and thinks highly of him. In Act I Scene IV Macbeth addresses Duncan with, “The service and the loyalty I owe, In doing it, pays itself. Your highness; part, is to receive our durites; and our duties.” As a dedicated soldier he would have never thought of killing the king until he was introduced to his newest role of power and the prophecy of kingship. Macbeth struggles internally and externally with these thoughts his morals know that he respects the Duncan and would not want to hurt him but as the thought of more power consumes him, the thoughts of murder begin to dance in his head. Moreover when he told his wife of this prophecy, she like the devil on his shoulder convinced him that there will be no repercussions to his crime, only power. Make sure Macbeth follows through she tempts him with the words of, “When you durst do it, then you were a man” Act I Scene…
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Macbeth is seen as a loyal, capable general in the Scottish army and the reports from the captain illustrate this “brave Macbeth, - well he deserves that name, -disdaining fortune, with his brandish’d steel, which smok’d with bloody execution.” Macbeth is displayed as being a good, ambitious man and shos substantial loyalty to King Duncan. It is only when the witches put the idea in his head that he ever considers becoming king. They manipulate his sheer amount of ambition and this striving for power affects every aspect of his life which eventually leads to his demise. Macbeth’s good moral values are revealed with Macbeth’s unwillingness to commit the murder and the fact that he supports the news that the king is a representative of God and to murder such a good king would cause “the frame of things disjoint.” He uses heavy euphemism in his soliloquy and replaces the word “murder” with “his taking off”, “horrid deed” and “assassination”. This suggests that Macbeth cannot bring himself to kill Duncan. A motif of blood is present throughout the play and symbolises the regret and guilt that Macbeth feels about the murder. However, due to Macbeth’s ambition, the idea of regicide put forth by the witches causes him to over think the situation and with Lady Macbeth’s manipulation of this fatal…
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One of the main themes in Macbeth is ambition and from the start we can see just how tempted Macbeth is at the thought of becoming king. He recognises his 'black and deep desires' but writes to tell his wife at length and is increasingly torn by a 'suggestion' that killing Duncan will make the witches' predictions come true.…
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After the war with the Norwegians and the traitor Macdonwald, on the way back to Forres, the King’s castle, Macbeth heard the witches’ prophecies of him being King of Scotland, after that he began to have ambitions and dreams for the future but was disheartened when the King announced that his eldest son Malcolm to be heir to the throne. After telling his wife about the witches’ prophecies and the disappointment at King’s announcement, Lady Macbeth came up with a plan to kill King Duncan immediately during their party that night. At first, during the party, Macbeth decided not to proceed with the plans since it went against his nature as loyalty and amicable and also against the conformity of the laws, but because of his ambitions and dreams were already too high, he followed his wife’s corrupted plan to commit regicide against the King during his sleep. Macbeth’s action showed that because of his dreams and desires to be King; he was willingly to commit any deeds to achieve it even though it meant to kill the King and steal the throne for himself and because of that dream, he had to betray his loyalty and humanity to be King. Not all dreams are good dreams; sometimes it is a nightmare that…
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The witches’ prophecies indicate that Macbeth will become “Thane of Glamis [...], the Thane of Cawdor [...], and king hereafter” (I.iii. 51-53). After Macbeth is titled the Thane of Cawdor- fulfilling one part of the prophecy- he begins to contemplate on the possibility of murdering Duncan, the current king of Scotland. Unfortunately, this ignites a severe dilemma for Macbeth because he lacks a legitimate reason to kill Duncan, aside from the invalid desire to seize his title as king. Macbeth immediately rejects this idea because it would be extremely simple if “this blow might be the be-all and the end-all here” (I.vii.5). Duncan recognizes Macbeth as a “valiant cousin [and] a worthy gentleman”, which ultimately makes it impossible for Macbeth to destroy the boundary of trust as Duncan’s host and worthy kinsman (I.ii.26). In spite of the difficult debate plaguing Macbeth’s mind, he still acts beyond his conscience and commit regicide only since “valuing ambition [...] o’erleaps itself on th’other” (I.vii.27-28). It was clearly Macbeth’s own judgement and free will that motivated him to execute the deed, despite acting upon his own morality and values. This act sets itself as the foundation of Macbeth’s dark journey to his inevitable demise. Apart from the eventual guilt and remorse that is soon to follow, Macbeth allows his thirst for power to satisfy his ego, and make “tears [...] drown the wind”…
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My first theme is the universal theme of being ambition and that between good and evil. The text of Macbeth shows one man who is blinded by his own ambition to become King. Spoken as an aside after Macbeth hears of the Witches’ prophecies, “The Prince of Cumberland! That is a step on which I mist fall down, or else o’erleap, for in my way it lies. Stars, hide your fires; let not light see my black and deep desires. The eye wink at the hand; yet let that be which the eye fears, when it is done, to see.” He describes Duncan as a “step” in his way and that he does have “black and deep desires” to be king. He was ambitious, and by his own admission it was ambition which prompted him to the murder of Duncan, “To our own lips, He’s here in double trust: First as I am his kinsman and his subject, Strong both against the deed; then, as his host, who should against his murder shut the door, not bear the knife myself. Besides, this Duncan Hath borne his faculties so meek hath been so clear in his great office…” Macbeth’s ambition had clearly suggested to him the killing of Duncan well before he met the witches as his wife proclaims to him that “nor time nor place did then adhere” Macbeth committing murder and doing everything he needs to do in order to fulfil his ambition for power sees him in leadership…
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