1 intro Everyone has a goal they would like to achieve, but can it be accomplished without causing harm to others? Macbeth did not take into account any one of his fellow Scottish nobles’ well-being in mind when the idea of being king was sprout in his mind. Macbeth is first called by superiors as brave and loyal to then being called evil by witches shows that there was a dramatic shift in his character throughout the play of Macbeth. William Shakespeare wrote Macbeth to show the audience how an almost perfect soldier can have one major tragic flaw which can affect the rest of one’s life. Macbeth’s tragic flaw, or the the fault that causes a tragic hero’s downfall, was his utter ambition to be king. He did not …show more content…
At first Macbeth was skeptical but soon after, he was promoted to be the Thane of Cawdor. Macbeth was never grateful or proud of himself to be awarded such a position for he was only worried about being king. He wrote a letter to wife about what the witches told him and she came up with a plan to exterminate King Duncan. The second time Macbeth met with the Weird Sisters, they provided him three warnings which ended up giving Macbeth false confidence. The first two apparitions went hand in hand and said “Beware Macduff! / Beware the Thane of Fife!” and “The power of man, for none of woman born / Shall harm Macbeth” (Shakespeare IV.i.81-82). The first apparition was an armed head and what it said did put some fear into Macbeth, but his pride overrode that after the second apparition, a bloody child, said that no man can harm Macbeth if he was not born of a woman. This, of course, gave Macbeth an overabundance of confidence as he thought that everyone has to be born of a woman. But, in the end, he learns that Macduff’s mother (most likely) died through childbirth and was born through a cesarean