Macbeth: Witch's Responsibility for the Behavior of Macbeth Three witches introduced at the beginning of the script were responsible for introducing the ideas that led to the death of Duncan and the destruction of Macbeth, but not the act of Macbeth itself. They talk about three predictions of Macbeth; Macbeth would be: 1) codder's seed, 2) grammy's seed, and the king. Macbeth welcomes the idea created in the witch's prophecy.
Witch as a heroine of Macbeth Traditionally, the Macbeth witch of Shakespeare is seen as a symbolic expression of the possibility of evil. Many of Macbeth's students and critics want to condemn Macbeth 's fall down to Mrs. Macbeth' s fault. In any case, some people think that witches are heroines in the play. - How the handling of the author 's relationship affects the heroine' s explanation of The Bell Jar by Quicksand of Sylvia Plath and Nella Larsen. Crazy, bad, and danger ===================================================== =================== "The Bell Jar" and Nella Larsen's "Quicksand"
Macbeth: Witch's Responsibility for the Behavior of Macbeth Three witches introduced at the beginning of the script were responsible for introducing the ideas that led to the death of Duncan and the destruction of Macbeth, but not the act of Macbeth itself. They talk about three predictions of Macbeth; Macbeth would be: 1) codder's seed, 2) grammy's seed, and the king. Macbeth welcomes the idea created in the witch's prophecy. Macbeth eventually killed King Duncan
Mrs. Macbeth and the wizard influenced Macbeth to kill Duncan, but Macbeth was responsible for his downfall. The witch's prophecy brought the idea into Macbeth 's heart, and became king of Scotland. They did not order Macbeth to murder King Duncan directly, but Macbeth explained their remarks in different ways and decided to kill him. By killing Duncan, Macbeth began to gain the power he did not have. He began to control his behavior, and Mrs Macbeth lost his control. The action that emphasized the deterioration of Macbeth 's morality was his order to kill McDuff' s family at the fourth act, the third act. This is an evil act, it is completely Macbeth 's decision. Others did not persuade or direct, and it obviously indicates that Macbeth 's character is fast and neat.