Wednesday, April 29, 2020
MACBETH Essays (1691 words) - Philosophy, Ethics, Fiction
  MACBETH       Macbeth is presented as a mature man of definitely  established character, successful in certain fields of  activity and enjoying an enviable reputation. We must not  conclude, there, that all his volitions and actions are  predictable; Macbeth's character, like any other man's at a  given moment, is what is being made out of potentialities  plus environment, and no one, not even Macbeth himself, can  know all his inordinate self-love whose actions are  discovered to be-and no doubt have been for a long time-  determined mainly by an inordinate desire for some temporal  or mutable good.     Macbeth is actuated in his conduct mainly by an  inordinate desire for worldly honors; his delight lies  primarily in buying golden opinions from all sorts of people.  But we must not, therefore, deny him an entirely human  complexity of motives. For example, his fighting in Duncan's  service is magnificent and courageous, and his evident joy in  it is traceable in art to the natural pleasure which  accompanies the explosive expenditure of prodigious physical  energy and the euphoria which follows. He also rejoices no  doubt in the success which crowns his efforts in battle - and  so on. He may even conceived of the proper motive which  should energize back of his great deed:       The service and the loyalty I owe,     In doing it, pays itself.    But while he destroys the king's enemies, such motives work  but dimly at best and are obscured in his consciousness by  more vigorous urges. In the main, as we have said, his nature  violently demands rewards: he fights valiantly in order that  he may be reported in such terms a "valour's minion" and  "Bellona's bridegroom"' he values success because it brings  spectacular fame and new titles and royal favor heaped upon  him in public. Now so long as these mutable goods are at all  commensurate with his inordinate desires - and such is the  case, up until he covets the kingship - Macbeth remains an  honorable gentleman. He is not a criminal; he has no criminal  tendencies. But once permit his self-love to demand a  satisfaction which cannot be honorably attained, and he is  likely to grasp any dishonorable means to that end which may  be safely employed. In other words, Macbeth has much of  natural good in him unimpaired; environment has conspired  with his nature to make him upright in all his dealings with  those about him. But moral goodness in him is undeveloped and  indeed still rudimentary, for his voluntary acts are scarcely  brought into harmony with ultimate end.     As he returns from victorious battle, puffed up with  self-love which demands ever-increasing recognition of his  greatness, the demonic forces of evil-symbolized by the Weird  Sisters-suggest to his inordinate imagination the splendid  prospect of attaining now the greatest mutable good he has  ever desired. These demons in the guise of witches cannot  read his inmost thoughts, but from observation of facial  expression and other bodily manifestations they surmise with   comparative accuracy what passions drive him and what dark  desires await their fostering. Realizing that he wishes the  kingdom, they prophesy that he shall be king. They cannot  thus compel his will to evil; but they do arouse his passions  and stir up a vehement and inordinate apprehension of the  imagination, which so perverts the judgment of reason that it  leads his will toward choosing means to the desired temporal  good. Indeed his imagination and passions are so vivid under  this evil impulse from without that "nothing is but what is  not"; and his reason is so impeded that he judges, "These  solicitings cannot be evil, cannot be good." Still, he is  provided with so much natural good that he is able to control  the apprehensions of his inordinate imagination and decides  to take no step involving crime. His autonomous decision not  to commit murder, however, is not in any sense based upon  moral grounds. No doubt he normally shrinks from the  unnaturalness of regicide; but he so far ignores ultimate  ends that, if he could perform the deed and escape its  consequences here upon this bank and shoal of time, he'ld  jump the life to come. Without denying him still a complexity  of motives - as kinsman and subject he may possibly  experience some slight shade of unmixed loyalty to the King  under his roof-we may even say that the consequences which he  fears are not at all inward and spiritual, It is to be  doubted whether he has ever so far considered the possible  effects of crime and evil upon the human soul-his later  discovery of horrible ravages produced by evil in his own  spirit constitutes part of the tragedy. Hi is mainly  concerned, as    
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