Macbeth: Pre-Determined Destiny
Macbeth
Pre-determined Destiny?
Macbeth was a victim of a vicious human flaw. Ambition. It
can be great in small dosages, but when one takes what one
believes to be ones destiny, as shown in Macbeth, it can be the
downfall. Macbeth was a Noble man worthy of Respect, then the
prophecies came, and then there was his wife.
"Brave and Bold Macbeth (well he deserves that name)" the
very words of the king that Macbeth so faithfully served. Never
once thinking of murder. But then he receives the Prophecy "Hail
Macbeth Thane of Glamis!" "Hail Macbeth Thane of Cawdor!" and
"Hail Macbeth king hereafter!". This plants the seed of evil in
Macbeth's mind. In fact, one of the first thoughts he has is of
Murder. When he returns home, his wife he had already informed;
she was sure, that he was "too full of the milk of human
kindness" or too feminine to do what was necessary. She......
View the rest of this paper...
Approximate Word Count: 642
Approximate Pages: 3 (250 words per double-spaced page)
Why should you join Frat Files?
- - It's safe, secure, and private.
- - Instant access to over 100,000 papers. New papers are added hourly.
- - Fast and reliable customer support.
Similar Essays
-
Macbeth: Pre-Determined Destiny
Macbeth: Pre-determined Destiny. Macbeth Pre-determined Destiny? Macbeth
was a victim of a vicious human flaw. Ambition. It can be ... -
Macbeth: Pre-Determined Destiny
Macbeth: Pre-determined Destiny. Macbeth Pre-determined Destiny? Macbeth
was a victim of a vicious human flaw. Ambition. It can be ... -
Macbetth
... Cawdor. This is part of his predetermined destiny, but destiny as it seems
has more events planned for Macbeth than he expects. In ... -
Macbeth: Verdict Not Guilty!
... Finally, no one has the power to change destiny. If Duncan's fate was to die than
the king's end was predetermined regardless of Macbeth or any other individual ... -
Fate Macbeth
... Fate is synonymous to the word destiny, which suggests that events are unavoidable
and unchangeable ... It was predetermined by fate that Macbeth would believe ...
