Macduff hears news that his family was murdered, presuming on account of Macbeth. This puts the two titans against each other. Macbeth, who has fallen from glory to the dark arts of killing whomever necessary to maintain power, clashes swords with Macduff, a humble man who only wished to seek the truth, now looking to seek vengeance for wrongdoings toward him. They can’t get more opposing in character from this great fight. This fight seals the fate of the story, good vs evil, the static character Macduff vs the dynamic character Macbeth. In traditional good vs evil fashion, Macduff as proven the better adversary.
Shakespeare has had quite an interesting time creating a series of stories that end in tragedy such as Macbeth’s. Macbeth shows us that even those who seem bound for greatness may fall into the clutches of century old traps. One small error can prove the difference between life and death, two polar opposites, both inherited by a different character in this story. Macduff has ventured the shadow of Macbeth’s crazed ambitions to set the lands of Scotland to their natural state. He has conquered who was once his equivalent who simply slipped and fell onto the other side of the same