Shakespeare's Fate Leads To Violence In Macbeth

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Trying out for the Olympics and making it is a very hard thing to do. Tonya Harding had been working hard since she was four but when it came time for her to try out there was one girl better than her and she knew she would not make it in. So she decided to hire someone to injure her compilation. Just like in Shakespeare’s story of Macbeth the knowledge of one's fate leads to violence. Macbeth’s fate drives him to kill. Macbeth finds out his fate from the three witches and he was compelled to make it happen fast and better. He decides that he is going to kill Duncan who was the king. Since the three witches told him that he was going to become king and he wanted the power faster. “I go, and it is done. The bell invites me” (Shakespeare 2.1.75). Macbeth knew his fate and it drove him to kill Duncan so he could achieve it faster. Another place in the story where Macbeth is driven to kill is when Macbeth convinces murderers that Banquo has done them wrong and they need to kill him and his son. “My lord, his throat is cut. That I did …show more content…

Lady Macbeth convinces Macbeth to kill Duncan when he was not on board to kill Duncan. She does this because Duncan looks too much like her father or she would kill him her self. “I laid their daggers ready;/He could not miss ’em. Had he not resembled/My father as he slept, I had done ’t” (Shakespeare 2.2.15-17). She could not do it herself so she had her husband to it anyway. She was an accessory to murder because she made the plan to kill him and then had Macbeth kill him for her. She also cleaned up the daggers and smeared the blood around. “Give me the daggers. The sleeping and the dead/Are but as pictures” (Shakespeare 2.2.69-70). Lady Macbeth took the daggers away from Macbeth and put them back next to Duncan’s dead body and smeared the blood everywhere. This also made her more apart from the murder. Ergo, Lady Macbeth commits crimes to make her future