Theme Of Motivation In Macbeth

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How far would you go to gain power, would you drive yourself mad? Make a deal with the devil? Get involved with witches? The tragedy of William Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the supernatural is quite important. His motivation all starts at the beginning of the play when he bumps into the three witches, the second witch claims to call Macbeth the “Thane of Cawdor” which takes Macbeth by surprise. He then starts to overthink it and tries to become what he thinks he is, planning to attempt murder. He’s starts having visions and imagine things due to paranoia through the consequences of murder. One night during supper, Macbeth also claims to see one of his victim’s ghost, being completely shocked, thinking someone is playing games on him.
To start off Macbeth’s spooky encounters, Macbeth and Banquo face the Three Witches in the beginning of the play. After criticizing the Three Weird Sisters, they respond hailing to Banquo and Macbeth. The second witch addresses Macbeth as “Thane of Cawdor”, he being confused at first starts to believe it and all the of the other things the witches claim as a prophecy. This is the start where Macbeth gets the motivation to try and own what he thinks is his. Macbeth encounters the Witches thinking not much of them, hearing
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Would you be as daring as Macbeth just to gain power even if it drove you insane? If you ever wanted something so bad that the consequences were brutal but still chose to do so. You shouldn’t ever put yourself in position to where you live in fear or guilt and that your mind decides to play tricks on you, causing you to go crazy. At that point, whatever you gain never is as much of a priority as your mental health. After reading Macbeth, I realized some things aren’t worth it, but people tend to actually make those mistakes Macbeth did. Yet, instead of their motivation was to gain power, in today's society, it’s the