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Theme Of Motives In Macbeth

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“What causes fights and quarrels among you? Don’t they come from your desires that battle within you? 2 You desire but do not have, so you kill. You covet but you cannot get what you want, so you quarrel and fight. You do not have because you do not ask God. 3 When you ask, you do not receive, because you ask with wrong motives, that you may spend what you get on your pleasures.”
-James 4:1-3

Macbeth wanted fame. He wanted to be the highest in the land. Not just one of the the highest, as he and Banquo were, but the supreme. He wanted the Kings place. Or did he? When we first read the Macbeth play, written by the great Shakespeare, we don’t read into Macbeth's inner wants and demons. We first read of the Three Witches, not of Macbeth. So then, how can we tell of Macbeth's motives, when we don’t even hear of his motives till the Witches prophesy? After all, the whole theme of this book is based upon his motives of self-fulfilment. So how is it we find the theme through motives we don’t see till later? That is a question, we shall answer together.

“34-40 DUNCAN Dismayed not this our captains, …show more content…
The theme we said was Self-fulfillment and the effects. We said they are not always bad, but in this story, they are. Macbeth's self-fulfilment lead him to try to make his fate a reality by his own means. I believe that if Macbeth behaved as Banquo, dealing in the thoughts of selfishness but not acting upon them,”Thou hast it now: king, Cawdor, Glamis, all, As the weird women promised, and I fear Thou played’st most foully for ’t. Yet it was said It should not stand in thy posterity,” (1-4, Act 3 scene 1) Banquo didn’t uses his self-indulgent motives to get what he wanted. Macbeth on the other hand did and was left with a life of failure, dis-admiration, and death. His motives of self-fulfilment lead to a tragedy that we have taken, and read as an example of what happens when we try to seek our own self-motives, in a negative

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