Macbeth - Charting His Downfall
This is my account of Macbeth’s downfall from a popular, successful soldier, quote "What he hath lost, noble Macbeth hath won", who has received great honours for his loyalty, his courage, his bravery and his nobility. At the end of the play the only respect he has is because of the fear that his subjects have of him.
"Great Dunsinane he strongly fortifies // some say he’s mad, others that lesser hate him."
I will go through Macbeth’s soliloquies and chart his character as it changes. A soliloquy is a speech made only to oneself, or even only thought.
Macbeth’s first soliloquy is in Act I, Scene III. Two of the things that the witches predicted have come true and ...
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thought ……. // Shakes so my single state of man."
The second soliloquy is in Act I, Scene IV, when the Thane of Cawdor has been killed. Duncan describes him as ‘a man on whom I built an absolute trust’. This parallels Macbeth, who he trusts, when he betrays him. Duncan pronounces his son as the prince of Cumberland and the heir to the throne. This throws Macbeth’s mind into even more confusion, as this is a ‘step which (he) must o’er-leap. He also, in the soliloquy, knows that his thoughts are evil, and he does not want good to see them.
"Stars, hide your fires, // Let not light see my black and deep desires."
In the third soliloquy Macbeth is still contemplating how he obtains the throne, but now he knows that murder is the only way, yet he fears ‘judgement’ and damnation. We see here that Macbeth has a conscience, and his mind cannot take the simple fact. He begins bringing up lots of excuses as to why he should not do it, but inevitably his ambition gets the ...
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of murder itself, and what it causes and what it means. He talk about all things that are bad and evil.
"Witchcraft … Pale Hecate (witch goddess) … Murder … Wolf … Tarquin."
He compares these things to a ‘present horror’. He gives murder a name, and he personifies it, and makes it an object.
All of these soliloquies show how ambitious he is, but also how ary of what will happen to him. He is a soldier, and this kind of killing he is not used to. He can kill an enemy on the battle field, but not an enemy in the back.
His fifth soliloquy is all about Macbeth’s insecurity with Banquo. He is scared of the fact that the witches predicted that Banquo’s children would become ...
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"Macbeth - Charting His Downfall." Essayworld.com. April 5, 2005. Accessed December 23, 2024. http://www.essayworld.com/essays/Macbeth-Charting-His-Downfall/24867.
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