Macbeth is a tragedy
by Shakespeare. The date of writing is unknown; the first performance is
believed to have been 1603. It is set in late 16th Century Scotland.
The title character is a general in
the Scottish army, and has just returned from an important victory to the great
favor and generosity of King Duncan.
So that’s a happy beginning (unless
you are Irish), but this is a tragedy – and things go south pretty quick.
Macbeth encounters three witches who prophesy that he will be given a new
title, and then become King. Fellow General Banquo also receives a prophesy
that though he himself shall not be king, there would be many kings amongst his
descendants.
Macbeth , Banquo, and the witches
by Theodore Chasseriau
Macbeth does not take the prophecy seriously until King Duncan rewards him with a new title. Still everything is pretty happy, but now that he’s beginning to believe the prophecy, Macbeth tells Lady Macbeth and things just get – well – in a word – tragic.
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth take
proactive steps to bring the prophesy about. One act of villainy and betrayal
leads to another, and another, and more.
False face must hide what the false heart doth know
Spoiler alert: Macbeth and Lady
Macbeth are scumbags.
The guilt of treachery begins to
trouble Macbeth, that and the ghost of one of his recently betrayed friends.
Lady Macbeth is at first pretty aloof to any remorse, but later she is driven
mad by guilt.
It doesn’t turn out well for either
of them, as their growing group of victims join forces to, determined to…
Let’s make us medicines of our great revenge
In some ways, Macbeth is less tragic
than some of Shakespeare’s tragedies. There is justice in the end, and some
brilliant ironic twists. Those meddlesome witches, give Macbeth a few more
prophecies that made him think he was invincible – but that in fact signaled his
doom.
As with any work of Shakespeare, Macbeth
contains phrases that are now part of English vernacular:
…be all and end all
…what’s done is done
And not really English vernacular,
but this phrase, that Lady Macbeth utters to Macbeth…screw your courage to the sticking place…is quoted in Disney’s
Beauty and the Beast.
There are also lines from Macbeth,
that other authors would later use as the title of their works.
One of the witches chants: By the pricking of my thumbs, Something
wicked this way comes. (Something
Wicked This Way Comes is the title of a Ray Bradbury story).
And finally, from Macbeth’s
soliloquy:
Life’s but a walking shadow; a poor player,
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more; it is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing
(The
Sound and the Fury is the title of a William Faulkner novel)
.
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