Monday, August 19, 2019
The Free Will of Macbeth Essay -- Macbeth essays
The Free Will of Macbeth     à    à  Ã   Destiny "Destiny is  not a matter of chance, it is a matter of choice; it is not a thing to be waited  for, it is a thing to be achieved." (William Jennings Bryan) Are we in control  of our own destiny, our own fate, or are our lives really already planned and  mapped out for us? Does Macbeth willfully choose evil in order to achieve his  "destiny"? Or, is his "destiny" doomed by the witches' prophecies? Macbeth may  not have made any of his same choices, if the three Weird sisters hadn't come to  him. In Shakespeare's play Macbeth, Macbeth is no pawn of fate. Although Macbeth  was destined to become king, the path he chose to take to achieve his aspiration  of obtaining the throne was of his own free will. Macbeth knew exactly what he  was doing in order to attain his destiny of becoming king. Although Macbeth was  skeptical about the witches' predictions he later learned as the play progressed  that destiny truly determined his future.      à       The prophecy of the witches was that Macbeth would become king. Nowhere did  the witches predict the following events in Macbeth's life before he reached the  throne. The prophecy of Macbeth becoming Thane of Cawdor had already come true,  enhancing Macbeth's aspirations of becoming king. The second prophecy would  certainly come true for him, but he has to choose how to get there. Macbeth was  destined for the throne, however obtaining that destiny was completely up to  him. Killing Duncan seemed to be the only way for him, even though he knew it  was wrong. Macbeth was well-aware his actions were immoral and unjust, and he  continued with the murders anyway. He contemplates the reasons for why it would  be wrong to kill Duncan, showing he could have ...              ...rely  different way if he had not already been told his future. The witches could have  very well enhanced Macbeth's desires he had held up inside him, causing him to  make such evil and terrible choices. Macbeth believed that there was a destiny,  for he was so threatened by Banquo's destiny of being father to a whole line of  kings, that he had Banquo murdered. As the play progressed, Macbeth learned that  his destiny ultimately forms his future.      à       All Macbeth's actions were choices to attain his destiny, but they were  nonetheless choices of his own free will. Macbeth was destined to become king;  however, destiny doesn't come along with the choices made to achieve that  destiny. Macbeth knew what he was doing.     à       Work Cited     Shakespeare, William.à   Tragedy of Macbeth . Ed. Barbara Mowat and  Paulà  Ã   Warstine. New York: Washington Press, 1992.à  Ã  Ã                          
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