Lady Macbeth by William Shakespeare

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In Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the struggle between good and evil is a recurring theme throughout the play; it is also the main conflict. The witches, Lady Macbeth and Macbeth’s ambition are all major causes of conflict between good and evil within the play.

Macbeth is a man who at first seems content to defend his king and country against treason and rebellion. However, when he is told of a prophecy by the witches, which implies that he will become Thane of Cawdor and then King of Scotland, it seems to spark Macbeth's already existing evil desires inside his head. It is Banquo who first responds to the prophecy of the witches because Macbeth is so deep in thought ‘My noble partner/You greet with present grace and great prediction/Of noble having and of royal hope/That he seems rapt withal.’, so it seems that the witches initiate Macbeth’s inner conflict and ambition for power as he struggles between good and evil.

The witches are shown to be evil from the very start “Fair is foul and foul is fair/ hover through the fog and filthy air.” The witches share the powers of fate as they can predict Macbeth and Banquo’s futures. The Witches are very significant in the time in which the play was written because the king at the time was James I, who strongly believed in witchcraft. So much so that he wrote a book on the subject called Demonologie. Once Duncan pronounces Macbeth with the title of Thane of Cawdor, Macbeth starts to really believe that the witch’s prophecy might indeed come true. Banquo notices his deep thought as he says ‘Look, how our partner’s rapt’, implying the start of Macbeth’s inner conflict between good and evil, as ‘rapt’ means trance or dazed state. The prophecy takes over Macbeth’s thoughts and in one of his asides h...

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...n good and evil. The witches manipulate Macbeth into fighting Macduff through the use of equivocation, which was very popular in the time in which the play was written because in the trials that followed the gun powder plot, a conspirator called Henry Garnet became notorious for equivocating. Macbeth was written in the same year as Garnet’s trial and as a result Shakespeare uses equivocation greatly throughout the play.

Macbeth decides to pointlessly murder Macduff’s family even though they were not mentioned in the prophecy. The witches told Macbeth he could not change fate, yet he continued to try and challenge it. This shows how desperate Macbeth is to secure his power. Macbeth’s battle with Macduff reflects the battle between good and evil and his tyranny is also a major cause of conflict between good and evil.

Works Cited

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