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- Krystal Abbott
- Pat Patterson
- English IV
- Friday, December 03, 1999
- Macbeth
- In Shakespeare’s lifetime he wrote many plays. Many of them were critically acclaimed
- and others cast aside. The crowd always wanted to be more thoroughly entertained and
- Shakespeare always tried to keep up with the people’s needs. In 1605, Shakespeare was being
- hounded for another work of genius. Hamlet and King Lear had just been completed and the
- people of England begged for more. He knew not of what to write and like many playwrights did
- some research. He found two stories from Hollinshed’s Chronicles of England, Scotland and
- Ireland. Shakespeare had already taken some ideas from there for his plays like Henry IV and
- Henry V. William decided to combine the reign of Macbeth and the murder of King Duff by
- Donwald and his wife, altering both to suit his needs. Macbeth is by far the shortest play that
- William Shakespeare wrote. The main reason why this is so is not because Shakespeare did not
- have much to say, but because King James was so impatient. Macbeth was written basically for
- the king. In fact, the emphasis on witchery was because King James so heavily believed in
- sorcery. Shakespeare worried very much about the evil powers insulting the king. After all was
- said and done, Macbeth was another barrier to be broken in the great scheme of performances. It
- was an instant success. King James and the court loved it along with England. No offenses were
- made from Malcolm needing help from England. Shakespeare feared that James would be
- offended by that. From that moment on Macbeth would be known by all. Yet the people begged
- for more and hoped Macbeth would be out done by another astounding play. Shakespeare
- wondered how such a task could be accomplished. What was it about Macbeth that made it
- loved by everyone? Shakespeare’s style has been analyzed by many and some still can not figure
- it out. His poetry has influenced his plays immensely.
- Apart from the fascinating characters of the two leading roles, the play’s chief
- attraction is it wonderful poetry. Scarcely a word is wasted, and vivid images
- tumble after each other in a stream of color and ideas (Ross 43).
- Shakespeare put great thought into what he wanted to write and his feelings expressed
- themselves through the stylistic devices of tone, characterization, and symbolism.
- Shakespeare’s characterization of Macbeth exonerates the impact he had on the play. The
- tone in Macbeth remains sinister and depressing throughout the play. Symbolism, on the other
- hand, kept the tragedy in tact, and if understood, revealed the whole play in the very beginning of
- her pages.
- The character of Macbeth profoundly effects the play, by means of transpiring his actions
- to hurt others. If looking at the characteristics of good and evil, it makes the reader wonder what
- makes a person good or evil. Evil is not born into people, but it is the only option they have left.
- Three features we have seen stand out clear in the general conception of Macbeth.
- There is his eminently practical nature, which is the key to the whole. And the
- absence in him of the inner life adds two special features: one is his helplessness
- under suspense, the other is the activity of his imagination with its susceptibility
- to supernatural terrors...His practical power develops as capacity for crime...his
- mind is as scorpions; it is tortured in restless ecstasy. Suspense has undermined
- his judgment and brought on him the gambler’s fever...The third feature in
- Macbeth is the quickening of his sensitiveness to the supernatural side by side
- with the deadening of his conscience...In the reaction from the murder of Banquo
- the supernatural appearance-which no eye sees but his own-appears more real to
- him than the real life around him. And from this point he seeks the supernatural,
- forces it to disclose its terrors, and thrusts himself into an agonized vision of
- generations that are to witness the triumph of his foes. (Moulton 335-337)
- Moulton knows what he is talking about. Macbeth was heavily influenced by supernatural
- forces. In fact, were it not for them he might be living a happy and content life. The witches had
- a profound affect on him. He soon found himself in a world where he wanted to know more and
- more and the weird women were the only ones who could satisfy his hunger. Macbeth went from
- a man who served everyone but himself to a man who served only himself. The one thing that
- Macbeth had that meant the most to him was his wife. Lady Macbeth is his world. For a man
- who shows so much hate, gives a lot of love. They are one of the greatest pairs of lovers that
- ever existed. There is a spot where the reader can obviously pick up the dramatic change
- Macbeth went through. “Seyton: The queen, my lord, is dead. Macbeth: She should have died
- hereafter; There would have been a time for such a word “(Shakespeare, Act V, Scene V). His
- wife, his love, his world had died and he did not even care. The way he just disregarded her lets
- the readers know that he is a changed man, and not for the better. His desire to be unstoppable
- and all powerful was what killed him. His ambition clouded his once clever mind to where he
- could not look past the apparitions prophecies.
- From the very first words, the tone reveals itself as drab and murky. It is thundering and
- lightning in the very beginning and rainstorms automatically give the readers an eerie feeling.
- A.C. Bradley states
- Darkness, we may even say blackness, broods over this tragedy. It is remarkable
- that almost all the scenes which at once recur to memory take place either at night
- or in some dark spot. The vision of the dagger, the murder of Duncan, the
- murder of Banquo, the sleep-walking of Lady Macbeth, all come in night scenes
- (Bradley 266).
- Bradley is merely stating that the atmosphere remains uniform. There are a few places where the
- dreary mood is blanketed by things that appear to be happy. When Macbeth arrives home, Lady
- Macbeth seems so enthusiastic to see him. She really is excited to see him, but beneath her
- happiness is a plot of deceit and murder.
- Lady Macbeth: Your face, my thane, is as a book, where men may read strange
- matters:-To beguile the time, look like the time; bear welcome in your eye, your
- hand, your tongue: look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under it
- (Shakespeare, Act 1, Scene III).
- She is telling him that his face can easily be read and that he needs to act like normal, but
- underneath to be cunning. This passage takes an almost cheery moment and takes it back to a
- world full of betrayal. Another place where gaiety is almost achieved is toward the very end of
- the book. “Malcolm: We will perform in measure, time, and place: So thanks to all at once, and
- to each one, Whom we invite to see us crown’d at Scone” (Shakespeare, Act V, Scene VII). All
- seems merry, but if thought about it, the reader can easily see that trouble awaits. Malcolm has
- just defeated Macbeth. However, he did not do this all on his own.. He had help from England
- in defeating. England would not send troops in to help fight a war all for nothing. They will
- soon try to recapture Scotland. Therefore, the “happy ending” is not really going to end “happily
- ever after.”
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- Words: 1263
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