Pros And Cons Of Macbeth

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Whatever is good will look evil and whatever is evil will look good. Macbeth was writen by the legendary William Shakespeare. His version of this timeless tale was set in eleventh century Scotland. Much of his inspiration was taken from the Stuart king James I and from a previous altered version of Macbeth called Chronicles by Holinshed. Shakespeare’s version is a mixture of fact and of legend. He regognized the great story in Chronicles and the potential great story from James I and created his own drama. Although, in his drama he freely adapted the material for the purpose of an even greater story to be told. Shakespeare focuses widely on the idea that our first perception of people could very well by the opposite of what they truly are …show more content…
Macduff tells Macbeth that if he does not fight him, he will put him in a cage with a sign that will read, “Here may you see the tyrant” (Shakespeare 5.8.27). This new character trait of being a tyrant was all the witches doing. They took a good and honest man and transforned him into a victim of fate, unable to control his own destiny. The sisters succeeded in taking Macbeth’s fate and turning it into something foul. Due to the witches Macbeth was tricked into killing his king that he was loyal too, killing his friend Banquo that he adored, and being a part of the death of his very own wife. Direcly before Macbeth is killed by Macduff it seems as though the witch release their tight grip on him, because in the flash of a moment he realizes how terrible he has truly become. Macbeth tells Macduff “I will not fight with thee” because he realized he had been decived by the witches (Shakespeare 5.8.22). This moment of apologetic behavior was to late for Macduff because his entire family had been murdured by Macbeth’s previous behavior while being influence by the witches. Macbeth is then free from life, witches, and any more evil influences as he dies at the blade of another man that will eternally by hurt by the witches