Impression of Macbeth From The 1st Two Acts of The Play
Impression of Macbeth From The 1st Two Acts of The Play
Impression of Macbeth From The 1st Two Acts of The Play
Not only is the audience made privy to Macbeth's state of mind from the first,
but he is also a character who has an extraordinary susceptibility to strong
feeling. This he registers both through his body and in language of powerful
emotional affect, as in his reaction to the Sisters’ prophecies. He starts fearfully,
as Banquo observes. Then he tries to analyze his reaction:
This supernatural soliciting
Cannot be ill; cannot be good. If ill,
Why hath it given me earnest of success,
Commencing in a truth? I am Thane of Cawdor.
If good, why do I yield to that suggestion
Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair,
And make my seated heart knock at my ribs,
Against the use of nature? Present fears
Are less than horrible imaginings.
My thought, whose murder yet is but fantastical
Shakes so my single state of man
That function is smothered in surmise,
And nothing is, but what is not
(1.3.132-44)
Macbeth's exploration of his own emotional response to what he immediately
identifies as a key event in his life contributes significantly to the play's larger
tragic effect. He thinks constantly about what he is feeling, and the destructive
effects of his chosen course of action are recorded in both mental and physical
terms. He cannot sleep and is shaken nightly by ‘terrible dreams’, he has fits,
flaws and starts, and his heart throbs. His intense self-consciousness and his
ability to draw the audience into his own perceptual system are largely
responsible for the fact that he comes across not just as a villain but also as a
suffering hero, constantly exposing his own emotional vulnerability.
This is not to deny the play a structural shapeliness. Macbeth achieves the
throne unhindered, but in the battle between crown and royalty he loose Royalty
but gains the Crown. Crown and Royalty- separated by a thin line of desire and
duty. Macbeth lost his Royalty the moment when his hands which should bow
in a gesture of obedience to Duncan, grab the dagger to decide his (Duncan’s)
the destiny. Macbeth is the victor and the vanquished. The presence of the word
"again" in the first line of the opening scene is a proposal of future impact. By
this it is indicated that the witches will happen again and again whether we see
them or not, they will mark their presence by Macbeth's actions. They perverted
the topography of Macbeth's psychological state. As nemesis unfolds, Macbeth
returns to his first role of warrior, suffering, like the former Thane of Cawdor,
the traitor’s ignominious fate. Yet this ending may not be without some element
of tragic catharsis. Macbeth is killed, justly, by the destined adversary, avoiding
the humiliation of playing the Roman fool. The moral sense that made his
surrender to crime so painful does not desert him.