Thursday, October 24, 2019
powmac The Power of Religion and Fate in Macbeth Essay -- Macbeth essa
The Power of Religion and Fate in Macbeth     Ã     Ã  Ã  Ã    Macbeth presents a religious view of man's existence and destiny. Shakespeare,  however, did not write a religious or theological tract. He explored the meaning  of human life in those terms which art uses in order to project our deepest  thoughts and feelings; in broad, popular religious symbols and myths, whose  meaning is as profound as it is easily recognized.     Ã       The unparalleled religious crisis, through which Europe was passing at the  time of Shakespeare writing Macbeth, the first decade of the seventeenth  century, shook the traditional religious heritage to its foundations. Placed  between an Everyman and a Pilgrim's Progress Macbeth did not have the simple  clarity of either; the former was written before the phase of violent  disintegration and the latter when more settled ideas had begun to consolidate  themselves. We do not see the fluency of construction in Macbeth as we see in  Everyman or Pilgrim's Progress. But the religious, Christian view is intensely  there to determine the nature of imagery and the significance of characters. The  human problem that is the basic idea of Macbeth is the relation between evil in  human nature called "sin" and the everlasting scheme of things presided over by  a Deity whose justice, wisdom and benevolence could be doubted temporarily but  never rejected. More abstractly, the problem was that of h   uman responsibility  and free will, human freedom, in a world ruled by divine necessity.     Ã       Ã       Macbeth begins with a set of supernatural figures. Witches have been always  associated with darkness, night and crime. Saul, in Samuel (1), visits the Witch  of Endor in order to know his destiny. Saul himself had taken seve...              ...moil in Act I shows  the process of perversion of reason and corruption of will. He knows the good  but will not and cannot do it and there is no intercessory power for him to turn  to for aid His incapacity to pray in the soliloquy in Act I, the intervention by  his wife (instead of by a good angel) just when he decides not to proceed  further, the promptness with which the fantasy of the deed forms itself in his  mind after he hears the prophecy-all these testify that Macbeth is a reprobate  predestined to damnation.     Ã       Ã       Ã       Works Cited:     Ã       Macbeth. New York: Arden Edition (New Series)     Ã       Bindoff,S.T. Sr Tudor England, Pelican Books.1959     Ã       Dyer, T. Folklore of Shakespeare. Griffith & Farren:London,1883 (First  Edition)     Ã       Elliott,G.R. Dramatic Providence in Shakespeare. Princeton University Press,  1958 (out-of-print Title)                      
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