Macbeth
By: Stenly • Essay • 341 Words • May 11, 2010 • 1,016 Views
Macbeth
Macbeth
Submitted by oppapers on October 16, 2002
Category: Book Reports
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Shelly Moy
AP LIT 4th hour
Shakespeare draws an amazing psychological portrait of a man who became a villain by means of ambition, desire and an imbalance of good and evil. "Macbeth" is a play composed of the disintegration of a noble man's world. The play begins by offering the audience Macbeth, a war hero, with a high regard from Duncan, the king of Scotland. By the end of the play Macbeth transforms into a universally despised man without a place in the social community. Shakespeare draws an amazing face of a man made to be a villain by ambition, desire and an imbalance of good and evil.
Macbeth, unhappy and unsatisfied with his social position, caused his feelings to snowball into the ambition that led him to the murder of Duncan.
"I have no spur
To prick the sides of my intent, but only
Vaulting ambition, which O'erleaps itself
And falls on th'other" (Act 1 sc. 7 pg 41)
By using an aside, Shakespeare