Do the witches cause Macbeth's fall or reveal what was already there?
Macbeth by Shakespeare, William
Discussion Participants:
This is the play's deepest puzzle. The weird sisters prophecy that Macbeth will be king, and he immediately thinks of murder—"why do I yield to that suggestion / Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair?" The thought comes before any prompting from Lady Macbeth. Did the witches plant ambition, or did they simply name what Macbeth already wanted? If the prophecy is fate, his choice is illusory and the tragedy mechanical. If the prophecy merely predicts what he would freely choose, then he damns himself. Shakespeare gives us both readings simultaneously. Where you land determines whether this is a play about supernatural corruption or about a man who uses fate as permission.
The witches, with their words like venomous whispers, did they not merely give shape to what was already stirring in my soul? Before their prophecy, was I not a loyal subject, content in my station? Yet, their words, "king hereafter," ignited a fire. Was it truly fate, or did I seize upon their prophecy as a justification for my darkest desires? "Stars, hide your fires; Let not light see my black and deep desires." Perhaps the fault lies not in the stars, but in ourselves, that we are underlings.
That is a profound query. The allure of power is a potent temptress. I perceive that the sisters merely revealed a potential future, a possibility. Macbeth's choices thereafter cemented his doom, as free will allows. I would suggest that perhaps the fault lies not entirely in the prophecy, but in Macbeth's interpretation of it, and the actions he subsequently undertook.
A knotty question, indeed. "Fair is foul, and foul is fair," hover through the fog and filthy air. Did we plant the seed, or did it merely find fertile ground?
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