Eng 321 - Essay 2 Macbeth
Eng 321 - Essay 2 Macbeth
Eng 321 - Essay 2 Macbeth
David Knaak
Professor Timmons
English 321
6 October 2019
Essay Question #1
transformation from hero to villain. While returning from war as a celebrated and faithful soldier
of the crown, he is confronted by three apparitional witches who prophesize his ascendancy to
the throne. Baffled by this event, Macbeth obsesses over the prophecy and begins creating a
scheme to assassinate the king with the assistance of his wife. Macbeth’s scheme eventually
becomes a reality: he kills the king, Duncan, and thereby completes his transformation into
villain by crossing what Stephen Greenblatt terms “the fatal line from criminal desire to criminal
act” (Greenblatt). In addition to this unique transformation, Macbeth also comes to occupy a
of the wickedness oh what he is doing” (Greenblatt). His choice mystifies him but, as the play
unfolds, his motives become evident as he chooses to continually commit evil. Macbeth
consciously chooses to commit evil because he resigns himself to the unbridled forces of fate and
ambition.
One of the primary forces that motivates Macbeth to commit evil is the force of fate. This
force is expressed through the prophecy of the witches, who imply that Macbeth is destined to
become king: “All hail, Macbeth, that shalt be king hereafter!” (1.3.51). Macbeth is initially
confused by the prophecy and questions the authority of their strange intelligence (1.3.77).
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However, before he receives an answer, the witches vanish and leave Macbeth to ponder his
destiny alone. He attempts to discuss the event with his wife, who only affirms that “fate and
metaphysical aid doth seem / To have thee crowned withal” (1.5.27-28). As a result, Macbeth
convinces himself that he must commit evil in order to ascend to the throne. Thus, the stage is set
for Macbeth to succumb to his fate of murdering King Duncan. As a last confirmation of his own
destiny, a bell rings out shortly before the murder occurs. Macbeth acknowledges the bell and
proclaims that it “invites me. / Hear it not, Duncan, for it is a knell / That summons thee to
Macbeth’s evil strikes and rumbles like the lightning and thunder that heralds the
appearance of the witches. The actualization of his own destiny creates instability in the kingdom
and threatens to turn the seas incarnadine from unending bloodshed (2.2.64-66). Macbeth’s
resignation to the force of fate has simultaneously given him a sort of power over fate and he
begins to believe that he is impervious when the witches prophesize that “none of woman born /
Shall harm Macbeth” (4.1.79-80). However, when Macbeth is later confronted by Macduff, it
becomes apparent that this same force will also lead to his own destruction. Having been ripped
from his mother during birth, Macduff is able to harm Macbeth and chops off his head in the heat
of battle. This scene complicates the audience’s understanding of fate and is one of the reasons
why Stephen Greenblatt argues that the “whole play is haunted by equivocation” (Greenblatt).
Life, both inside and outside of the play, certainly has a deterministic element. It is also a
strange, interwoven experience of conflicting, ambiguous forces. Where fate may favor an
individual like Macbeth in one moment, it may also favor an individual like Macduff in the next.
At the end of the play, fate favors Malcolm and he reclaims the throne for his family. However,
as the play ends, the audience is left with one final, unrealized prophecy: Banquo’s children have
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yet to claim the throne as theirs. This suggests that the story of Macbeth is an allegorical
representation of the unending cycle of fate: a cycle that both empowers and disenfranchises
people, and a cycle where “fair is foul, and foul is fair” (1.1.11).
The other primary force that motivates Macbeth to commit evil is the force of ambition.
This force is realized in his interactions with his wife. While contemplating the ramifications of
the realization of his destiny, Macbeth recognizes the spiritual impact of murdering King Duncan
and states that his virtues “Will plead like angels, trumpet-tongued, against / The deep damnation
of his taking-off” (1.7.16-20). Armed with this revelation, Macbeth confronts his wife and
attempts to convince her that his ambition has been satiated by his war victories and the
subsequent honors from his king. However, Lady Macbeth remains dubious and chidingly
responds: “Art thou afeared / To be the same in thine own act and valor / As thou art in desire?”
(1.7.39-41). Lady Macbeth, like Macbeth himself, understands that he is the limiting agent of his
own ambition. However, unlike Macbeth, she disregards the spiritual impacts of exercising
unbridled ambition. In the face of her conviction, he flimsily attempts to counter with the
possibility of failure. Lady Macbeth remains undaunted and challenges him to have the courage
to overlook failure. Her message resonates with Macbeth and he eventually succumbs. In a final
acknowledgement of his defeat against his own ambition, Macbeth confesses that “I am settled
Like nature, the force of ambition is fraught with ambiguity. Ambition can elevate the
warrior is compared to that of the husband of Bellona, the Roman goddess of war (1.2.56-59).
Ambition can also exist without impetus, which Macbeth acknowledges when he realizes that his
ambition to kill King Duncan has “no spur / To prick the sides of my intent, but only / Vaulting
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ambition, which o’erleaps itself” (1.7.25-28). While Macbeth’s ambition certainly exists in both
realms throughout the play, it is the gradual unbridling of his ambition that prompts him to
continue to commit even more evil. In particular, the witches and Lady Macbeth are instrumental
in this unbridling because they act like psychological mirrors. As his convictions dissolve and his
reflection becomes more distinct, Macbeth’s ambition drives him to kill innocent women and
children during the assault on Macduff’s castle (4.3.204-205). In the wake of his ambition
though, he loses people who are very close and meaningful to him, such as Banquo, King
Duncan, and Lady Macbeth herself. Near the end of the play, he is left alone and staring at the
monster he has transformed into. Ultimately, Macbeth’s unbridled ambition leads to his
downfall, making all of his actions meaningless and turning his life into “a tale / Told by an idiot,
Though both of these forces have been examined separately, it is important to note that,
combined, they both act in unison to compel Macbeth to commit evil. Macbeth convinces
himself that both forces of fate and ambition have determined his future. As a result, these forces
become unbridled and he justifies his evil through their realization. Though Macbeth is a
fictional character, he explores the very real experience of entertaining thoughts and fantasies of
committing evil upon other people. However, Macbeth’s fantasies merge with reality and
complex cycles of cause and effect are set in motion. In some ways, the phanstamic dagger that
haunts Macbeth throughout the play is symbolic of how dangerous our own evil thoughts can
become. These daggers of the mind can be played with and twirled around our fingers, but when
they are directed at and stuck into other people in reality, evil becomes actualized.
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Works Cited
Greenblatt, Stephen. “Macbeth Introduction.” The Norton Shakespeare, Ed. Stephen Greenblatt,
Shakespeare, William. “Macbeth.” The Norton Shakespeare, Ed. Stephen Greenblatt, third ed.,