Macbeth Theme Essay

1131 Words3 Pages

The dark and twisted story of Macbeth, about a man who seeks royalty and turns into a completely different person. He had many different concepts to comprehend. Macbeth changed from being an innocent man to being comfortable with murder and murdering many people. The main themes in Macbeth were ambition, guilt, and things are not what they seem. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth would do anything to become the best, but is the guilt worth the royalty in the end?

Macbeth and Lady Macbeth's determination for royalty soon turned into guilt after acknowledging the murder they committed. At first, Lady Macbeth was the one who wanted the murder of Duncan. Lady Macbeth's view on Macbeths idea was very uncertain about committing the crime. Lady Macbeth …show more content…

Lady Macbeth had to talk Macbeth into going through with the murder of Duncan. Once Macbeth got past his first, then he became a killing machine. Although the things they both did and came up with were horrible, they had such motivation to become royalty. They would have done whatever it took. Lady Macbeth said, "To catch the nearest way: thou wouldst be great, art not without ambition, but without the illness should attend it." She said this to Macbeth when they were talking about committing the murders. Lady Macbeth believes they need the motivation to complete their sick plan because Macbeth doesn't have the evil inside him to do it without motivation. She also says, "We fail? but screw your courage to the sticking-place, and we'll not fail." Lady Macbeth says this to Macbeth trying to convince him if he does everything he can and sticks to its they cannot fail with committing the murder of Duncan. Lady Macbeth's words show how she and Macbeth will do whatever it takes to become the king and queen. that's all they want and do not care about others. Lady Macbeth was sure that they should not let nature take its course and see if royalty would happen on its own, but make becoming king and queen happen with them killing Duncan and stealing the

Open Document