Good And Bad In Shakespeare's Macbeth

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Macbeth good and bad

Intro:

Shakespeare highlights the theme of ambition/violence/guilt/order and disorder through good and bad. In the time era (Jacobean era, 17th century) the regicide of a king or queen is seen as sacrilegious as they are believed to be embodiments of God.
Paragraph 1 – the witches:

Point:
Shakespeare presents the witches as a form of evil in act 1 scene 1; pathetic fallacy sets the scene of darkness and devilish feel in the atmosphere. As of the time ere, witches are seen as very bad, a decent from the devil as well as foretelling the future of Macbeth which makes him think of sacrilegious event of killing king Duncan.
Evidence:
This is clear when the witches chant to him “all hail, Macbeth, that shall be king hereafter” this obviously plays in his head if it is true or not.
Explanation:
This shows us that by telling Macbeth his future puts ideas into his head of how it would be possible and he considers killing the king which he then after thinks is madness and he couldn’t do it, but the idea of him being king makes him want to seize power.
Link:
The witches are seen as evil by telling Macbeth his future as before he would’ve never thought of such a crime and if they were not to tell him this he would never have thought of killing king Duncan and telling lady Macbeth what they said. …show more content…

"Come you spirits that tend my mortal thoughts, unsex me here, and fill me from the crown to the toe, top full of direst cruelty. Come thick night, and pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell, that my knife see not the wound it makes, nor heaven peep through the blanket of dark." These lines are stated in a soliloquy, asking for the evil spirits to be bought upon her. Lady Macbeth could never of killed Duncan as he reminded her of her own father ,proving Macbeth had to also fulfilled Lady Macbeth 's ambitions as well as his

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