Topic > Interview with the main character of Macbeth

Why did you let yourself be influenced by the witches and your wife? Well, you have to understand that she IS my wife and she seemed to want the best for me. But now I realize I should never have listened to it. I should have left fortune to fate and contented myself for the time being with the position of Thane of Cawdor. Even the witches were just playing with my mind and making me believe that I had to kill to become king when it eventually happened. The witches wanted all this to happen, because they wanted to create havoc and misery. By telling me that I would become king, he started a whole chain of events that led to the destruction of my life. When King Duncan declared his eldest son, Malcolm, Prince of Cumberland, the next king, how did you feel? confused. I started thinking about all the ways I could become king when King Duncan had already declared that Malcolm would become king. I couldn't think of a suitable way, so my wife came to me with the idea of ​​killing Duncan. I wasn't sure, that wasn't how the witches told it, but she said she would commit the murder herself. When Duncan arrived, I hated the idea of ​​killing my king and cousin and tried to make sense of it, but in the end I was the one who killed Duncan. Why were you not satisfied with being Thane of Cawdor and waiting for fate, instead of forcing? luck acting so much alone? Well, I guess it was because power is so tempting. I wanted everything I could have at that moment, and I was willing to get it any way I could, even if it drove me crazy. Thane of Cawdor is a very high position and I was happy with it, but the prospect of becoming king was there and I wanted it all. What was it like to kill someone? What went through you… middle of paper… there are so many I wanted to hold onto them. Both of these people did it for their own gain, just like me. Tanya had people who influenced her, as Lady Macbeth did me. We have all fallen prey to ambition, greed and jealousy. For when you showed reluctance to act, you allowed Lady Macbeth to push you into acts of greed while accusing you of being less than a man. Of this, I'm not entirely sure. I think it's because she's my wife and I trusted her. I thought he could be an advisor to me, someone who could help me make the right choices for me and my country. I showed reluctance, but she told me I had to do it, that great rewards would come from killing Duncan. I wish I had followed my first instinct, what I thought then, because it would have made my life much easier and maybe I would have come to have the position of king in a non-brutal way.