Examples Of Prediction In Macbeth

600 Words2 Pages

“All hail, Macbeth, thou shalt be king hereafter!” This is what a witch says, and this prediction triggers Macbeth to murder Duncan. Macbeth completely believes in witches, and he plans to murder Duncan to be the king. He sees a hallucination before his murder, and it triggers him to kill Duncan. However, he feels guilty about what he’s done after the murder even Lady Macbeth tells him not to. When people have been controlled their minds as been predicted their futures of greatness, they literally believe in predictions, and the predictions can destroy their lives, they can’t enjoy their lives with knowing the future. Therefore they regret that they believed in predictions which made their lives worse.

Macbeth is recognized as a brave and fearless warrior at the beginning of the play, but the witches appear and they predict that he will be the king later. This prediction confuses him, and it impacts his life. He starts to think how he can become the King, and he ends up with a plan to kill the King Duncan. He avoids Duncan because he can’t behave well in front of Duncan, but Lady Macbeth is able to behave well. He just comes up at the end of the Banquet and says “Our duties are to your throne and state children and servants.” He acted as normal as he can. His act is fair, but his thought is foul. …show more content…

“And on thy blade and dudgeon gouts of blood, which was not so before.” Macbeth says. Now there is blood on the blade which represents the guilt. The significance of this scene is that Macbeth feels torn between guilt and temptation. He still feels guilty about what he would do, but the hallucination tempts him to murdering. Eventually he can’t overcome the temptation, and he decides to murder

Open Document