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Three Witches In Macbeth

Decent Essays

In the play of Macbeth, by William Shakespeare, Macbeth is confronted by Three Witches and his wife, Lady Macbeth. It was said that the Three Witches could speak of the future and his wife knew of this and thought of it as truth so, she influenced her husband to make them true. With the help of the Three Witches and Lady Macbeth, Macbeth seeks out to make these prophecies come true and some not. Because of the prophecies he commits murder (with the help of his wife) on several occasions to fulfill or to prevent them. Through Macbeth, Shakespeare conveys the power of suggestion using a supernatural entail, the influence of significant others, and how suggestion can lead to action.
Macbeth and Banquo are on the battlefield of the fight against …show more content…

The Three Witches then summon three apparitions, which state, “...Macbeth! Beware/ Macduff;/ Beware the Thane of Fife/...laugh/ to scorn/ The pow’r of man,/ for none of women born/ Shall harm Macbeth/… Macbeth shall never vanquished be until/ Great Birnam Wood to High Dunsinane Hill/ Shall come against him.”(4.1.121-123). The interpretation of the apparitions is Macduff will stand in his way, no one who is born that of a women shall kill Macbeth, and that he will never die until he fights against Great Birnam Wood to his castle hill. This gives a sense of overconfidence to Macbeth, if never have known this info who knows what would have happened and what he would have done. He fights a war against the the English Army who are in command of Macduff and Malcolm. They tell their men to dress themselves up in camouflage so they use the Birnam Wood branches to march up to his castle and so the third prophecy is fulfilled. Macbeth knows about this and accepts this prophecy so, he leaves his castle to fight in the battlefield. Young Siward and Macbeth have a fight because Macbeth still thinks that he can’t be killed of a man born from a women, who then kills him fueling his overconfidence even more. Macduff finds Young Siward dead and hunts for Macbeth, who tells Macduff that no one that is born of a woman can harm Macbeth; Macduff was not naturally born from a woman he was “ripped out of his mother's womb”. Finding out this info Macduff knows he can kill Macbeth and Macbeth knows that he is going to die. He accepts death rather than suffer humiliation so Macduff kills Macbeth confirming the first and second

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