"Strong power brings great responsibility." This sentence has been repeated for many years. And it is spoken to by all powerful people. But from time to time, we ask ourselves who will dominate such burdens and shoulders themselves. Well, Shakespeare reveals to us in his play "Macbeth" about power and its influence and its influence on humanity and provides answers to our above question. When people take power, the definition of power changes and it changes according to their view.
In Macbeth, Shakespeare depicts the tragic result of Macbeth 's power aspiration. Initially it was a faithful soldier of glory, full of "good breasts of human beings", but Macbeth became the "jumping" ambition of the king and brought the murder of the respected King of Duncan. Shakespeare portrays Macbeth's "deep and dark desire" as a sinister person, but with the historical background to paint the witches as "tools of darkness", Macbeth became the victim of their "haste" It was. . Together with Mrs. Macbeth 's "evil coat", these troops collide to confuse the moral balance of Macbeth.
Shakespeare 's "Macbeth' s tragedy" depicts this authority and his wife, they are destroyed by pursuit of power. Mrs. Macbeth 's guilt made her crazy, desperate attempts to seize his bad position on Macbeth led him into insanity. Shakespeare's audience will be familiar with the concept of a large chain of existence that the world exists in the hierarchy from inanimate rocks to God themselves. This means that the farmer's hierarchy is lower than the aristocracy and the best man (under the angel and the god) is the king. Destroying the king means to disrupt the order of nature in the world, hence the second act, a strange supernatural event described in scene iv. Ross said that even Duncan 's horses are crazy and are eating for each other, and there is a general darkness that things went wrong.
How does Shakespeare present a crazy theme in drama Macbeth? What is the way of viewing Shakespeare's spectators' shows against this theme? What do you think of the modern audience?