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Untitled Essay, Research Paper
The Character of Macbeth.
The play ‘Macbeth’ is a portrait of one man, Macbeth, showing how
he changes. Although we are presented with his deterioration from good to
evil, we can see his human side throughout the play, which makes it a tragedy.
It is the shortest of Shakespeare’s tragedies, and has a very fast pace.
Once Macbeth’s ambition has ‘set the ball rolling’, events
happen quickly in the play as it gathers momentum. The themes of
‘Macbeth’ are ambition, effects of evil, and violence, shown mainly
by the language of the play, as in Shakespeare’s time plays were performed
in daylight with very few props. Ambition is something that everyone can
identify with, and ‘Macbeth’ is a compelling study of how ambition
can destroy you, so the audience are interested in Macbeth’s
character.
Our first impression of Macbeth is of a heroic, famous, popular man who is
well liked by the king – Duncan refers to Macbeth as ‘noble
Macbeth’.(Act 1 Scene 2 L67) Macbeth is tempted by two sources of external
evil – the witches and his wife, but he was already ambitious, and they only
increased this by making his ambitions seem like they could be reality. The
war hero becomes a murderer and then dies a shameful and violent death.
Shakespeare creates an atmosphere of evil and darkness mainly through his
language, although scenes containing violent actions or the witches are often
played in darkness. Shakespeare uses poetry (verse) as opposed to prose,
as poetry often contains more metaphors and imagery, which he used to create
a feeling of darkness and evil. The language gives an insight into the character
of Macbeth – we see his ruthlessness and cruelty, but also fear, doubt and
some scruples.
Macbeth’s first words, ‘So foul and fair a day I have not seen’
(Act 1:3 L36) immediately associate him with the witches because they say
in the first scene ‘ fair is foul and foul is fair’ (1:1 L12),
so evil is brought to mind. Macbeth is connected with the supernatural in
the audience’s mind from the onset. This is the first thing that is
not consistent with Macbeth’s image of a war hero.
In an aside later on in Act 1:3, Macbeth reveals that he is thinking of killing
Duncan. Asides are very important because they give the audience an insight
into the character’s mind. Once the audience knows how the character
thinks, they tend to sympathise with him, which is another reason why
‘Macbeth’ is a tragedy. The aside follows closely Macbeth’s
desires and doubts – he does not know whether ‘this supernatural
soliciting’ is good or bad, but he dearly wants to be king. He describes
the murder that he is imagining to be ‘horrible’(1:3 L137) and
‘makes my seated heart knock at my ribs’ (1:3 L135), showing that
the whole idea disgusts and horrifies him, as it would any man who was brave
and noble, but Macbeth cannot stop thinking about it, showing that he is
considering the idea and is drawn to it, and that he has ambitions to be
king within him already.
Macbeth is drawn to darkness, because he believes that it will hide his evil
deeds. This is first shown when he says ‘stars hide your fires, let
not light see my black and deep desires’ ( 1:4 L50). Macbeth is afraid
that people will realise that he wants to be king and is prepared to kill
for it, so he calls on the stars to hide their light, so people cannot see
what he is thinking. This is again in an aside, so the audience are the only
ones who know what Macbeth is thinking. Asides and soliloquies help the audience
understand Macbeth and also paint the scene. The audience can see that he
has become yet more drawn to evil.
Evidence that Macbeth has a human side and is very worried is found in a
long soliloquy – a speech where Macbeth is alone on stage so we can again
see what Macbeth is thinking. He is worried about his eternal soul, and what
his punishment will be in Heaven if he kills Duncan. He thinks of reasons
why he should not kill Duncan – ‘He’s here in double trust: First,
as I am his kinsman and his subject, strong both against the deed; then,
as his host he should against his murderer shut the door, not bear the knife
myself.’(1:7 L12-16) This shows that Macbeth is not totally evil, but
his ambition spurs him on. Later in the scene, Macbeth decides not to commit
the murder, but Lady Macbeth taunts him until he gives in, showing that he
is weak, and Lady Macbeth is much the more dominant of the two. Lady Macbeth
had said earlier ‘I fear thy nature, it is too full o’th’milk
of human kindness’ (1:5 L14-15), showing that she knew that Macbeth
was not strong enough or evil enough to murder Duncan on his own, and she
would have to push him into it. This shows that Macbeth was decent, but not
strong minded.
As the time for Duncan’s murder draws nearer and nearer, Macbeth becomes
more and more nervous, and is prone to hallucinations; for example when he
says ‘Is this a dagger I see before me’ (2:1 L35) and ‘I see
thee still and on thy blade dudgeon gouts of blood’(2:1 L45-46); he
is imagining that he sees a dagger covered with blood pointing towards
Duncan’s chamber. He later describes another hallucination – ‘Thou
sure and firm-set earth, hear not my steps, which way they walk, for fear
thy very stones prate of my whereabouts’ (2:1 L56-58). He is afraid
that the stones will call out to the people that he is a murderer. Both
hallucinations show that he is sensitive and has big doubts about the murder,
and he is not entirely a cold-blooded murderer, who would have no such
scruples.
However, his language becomes more and more to do with evil as is shown by
a large part of his soliloquy – ‘Now o’er the one half-world Nature
seems dead, and wicked dreams abuse the curtained sleep. Witchcraft celebrates
pale Hecate’s off’rings, and withered murderer alarumed by his
sentinel, the wolf, whose howl’s his watch, thus with his stealthy pace,
with Tarquin’s ravishing strides, towards his design moves like a
ghost.’(2:1 L49-46). At the beginning of this quote, Macbeth thinks
that the world seems unnatural, and everything belonging to nature is dead,
and nightmares are left to disturb sleep. He then goes on to think about
the supernatural – Hecate was a goddess of witchcraft – and he thinks of
murder as being an actual being, and describes it as creeping like a ghost
towards its design with Tarquin’s ravishing strides (Tarquin was a Roman
prince who raped a woman). Although this speech is all connected with evil,
it shows that Macbeth is thinking deeply, and has a sensitive side.
When Macbeth has actually committed the deed, he is still imagining things,
such as ‘Methought I heard a voice cry, “sleep no more: Macbeth does
murder sleep”’(2:2 L38-39). Macbeth is afraid that he will never sleep
again because of what he has done. Before this, he also said that he had
‘hangman’s hands’ (2:2 L30) which also shows that Macbeth
feels guilty. The most significant imagery is when Macbeth is alone, and
says ‘What hands are here? Ha! they pluck out mine eyes. Will all great
Neptune’s ocean wash this blood clean from my hand? No: this my hand
will rather the multitudinous seas incarnadine, making the green one
red.’(2:2 L62-66).Here Macbeth imagines that his hands are so stained
with blood which signifies his guilt, that not even an ocean could wash his
hands clean, but rather that his hands would stain the water with his blood,
until everything he touched became as guilty as he was. The fact that Macbeth
feels guilty shows that he is not just a cold-blooded murderer.
Macbeth by now is more dominant, and seems to rely more on darkness and evil
than his wife, as he no longer tells her about his plans. When he decides
to kill Banquo and Fleance, he does not tell her what he is going to do,
but says ‘Then be thou jocund: ere the bat hath flown his cloistered
flight, ere to black Hecate’s summons the shard-borne beetle with his
drowsy hums hath wrung night’s rote.’(3:2 L40-44) The language
suggests that Macbeth is feeling more and more drawn to evil.
Macbeth shows that he is reliant on evil in his next speech – ‘Come,
seeling night, scarf up the tender eye of pitiful day and with the bloody
and invisible hand cancel and tear to pieces that great bond which keeps
me pale.’(3:2 L46-49). This also shows his insecurity after Duncan’s
murder – he needs evil to destroy his conscience, so that he will not be
overcome with guilt and back down at the last minute. Macbeth later seems
to be on the brink of madness, when he imagines that he has seen Banquo’s
ghost – his insecurity and guilt are driving him insane. At the end of that
scene, Macbeth says, ‘I am in blood stepped so far that should I wade
no more, returning were as tedious as go o’er’(3:4 L136-138). He
imagines himself to be in a river of blood, halfway across, so if he wanted
to stop it would be as hard to go back as to go forwards. The blood signifies
all of the evil and murders he has done and will do. Macbeth feels guilty,
but he has gone so far that he is too consumed by evil to go back.
In the last act of the play, traces of Macbeth’s old, better character
become more apparent. Macbeth seems wistful in one speech – ‘That which
should accompany old age, as honour, love, obedience, troops of friends,
I must not look to have; but in their stead, curses, not loud but deep,
mouth-honour, breath which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare
not.’(5:3 L24-28). Macbeth has realised that when he grows old he will
not have the things that other people have, and that he would have had had
he remained merely Thane of Cawdor, and a hero. No-one will truly love and
honour him, but they will praise him because they are afraid of him and his
tyranny. He has realised that he has paid a heavy price to become king, and
now he is not sure if it is worth it.
Macbeth’s wife’s death sets him brooding on life’s futility.
His speech: ‘She should hereafter; there would have been a time for
such a word. Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow creeps in this petty pace
from day to day to the last syllable of recorded time; and all our yesterdays
have lighted fools the way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle, life’s
but a walking shadow, a poor player that struts and frets his hour upon the
stage and then is heard no more.’ (5:5 L16-25),shows him to be bitter,
and perhaps thinking about his own life ahead of him, now that his only ally
is gone. He cannot see a meaning to his life.
Macbeth has been betrayed by the apparitions and Birnam wood is moving to
Dunsinane, but Macbeth says ‘Blow wind, come wrack; at least we’ll
die with harness on our back.’(5:5 L50-51). There is bravery in his
decision to go down fighting.
When MacDuff finally finds Macbeth, Macbeth says ‘Of all men else I
have avoided thee, but get thee back, my soul is too much charged with blood
of thine already.’(5:8 L46). Macbeth feels guilty because he ordered
the murders of MacDuff’s family already, and he knows that if he fights
with MacDuff, he will win because he has a ‘charmed life’. There
are traces of nobility in this – Macbeth does not want to use his unfair
advantage unless he has to – he would rather not fight.
When Macbeth learns that MacDuff is not ‘of woman born’, he does
not want to fight, but MacDuff says that he is a coward and he will exhibit
him in captivity. Macbeth says ‘I will not yield to kiss the ground
before young Malcolm’s feet and to be baited with the rabble’s
curse. Though Birnam wood be come to Dunsinane and though opposed being of
no woman born, yet I will try the last. Before my body, I throw my warlike
shield. Lay on, MacDufff, and damned be him that first cries, “Hold,
enough!”’ There is nobility in the way that Macbeth chooses to die fighting,
and his remnants of dignity and pride make the thought of being subservient
to Malcolm and being exhibited as a tyrant unbearable. Although Macbeth was
hated as an ‘abhorred tyrant’(5:7 L10) by all, his pride and nobility
were preserved by his decision to die rather than be captive.