| At the beginning of the play,
|
| we look upon Macbeth as a shining hero.
|
| On behalf of his king, Duncan,
|
| he has just defeated the traitor Macdonwald,
|
| quelling high treason and subversion,
|
| safeguarding the rule of the king,
|
| so Scotland can look forward to a new era of peace.
|
| On their way from the battlefield the commanders Macbeth
|
| and Banquo meet three witches,
|
| who foretell the warriors promising prophecies: To
|
| Macbeth they predict the Thanehood of Glamis and of
|
| Cawdor — and eventually even the crown of Scotland,
|
| to Banquo, oil the other hand, that he would be father of a line of Kings.
|
| Macbeth is already the Thane of Glamis,
|
| and out of gratitude the king soon bestows the Thanehood
|
| of Cawdor upon him. |
| So the fulfilment of the last prediction
|
| seems to be close at hand.
|
| Only King Duncan himself stands in the way of Macbcth’s
|
| aroused ambitions. |
| It seems like a stroke of fate when
|
| the grateful king arrives as a guest at the castle
|
| of the Thane of Glamis and Cawdor to express his profound
|
| gratitude to this outstanding warrior.
|
| Unlike Macbeth, who feels covetous but hesitant,
|
| his wife is prepared to act.
|
| She spurs on her husband, encouraging him to seize
|
| this supposed opportunity of fate like a man.
|
| Macbeth stabs the defenceless king in his sleep,
|
| and with the help of his wife he succeeds in casting
|
| suspicion upon the king’s guards.
|
| Rut while the majority of the Scottish noblemen do
|
| not dare to question his story,
|
| Malcolm, the king’s son, escapes to England with a
|
| number of faithful followers.
|
| Among them is Macduff, next to Macbeth one of Scotland’s
|
| most influential Thanes.
|
| Macbeth, the king’s murderer,
|
| is crowned King of Scotland soon afterwards but the
|
| fruits from his deed taste sour.
|
| Macbeth can neither enjoy his status nor his power
|
| as the ruling king for even a single moment.
|
| Worry and anxiety are casting dark shadows on his life.
|
| .After all, as the witches have predicted,
|
| Banquo would be the forefathers of a new line of kings
|
| — for the childless Macbeth a source of constant threat
|
| and fear. |
| Before long, he hires assassins to kill Banquo,
|
| the supposed father of kings and only other person
|
| who knows about the witches' prophecies.
|
| But the admonishing ghost of the murdered Banquo appears
|
| in front of Macbeth’s eyes at a banquet.
|
| From this point on, it becomes apparent to what extent
|
| Macbeth has already succumbed to madness and is being
|
| pursued by the ghosts of his murdered victims.
|
| Again Macbeth seeks out the witches to ask them about
|
| his future. |
| They assure him that no man of woman born
|
| would ever be a threat for him,
|
| yet Macbeth should beware of Macduff,
|
| whom he can only conquer through violence.
|
| Macbeth feels encouraged by the witches' predictions
|
| and sets about «clearing up"among his supposed enemies.
|
| In his growing madness, he turns from a murderer into
|
| a tyrant, and the whole country moans and suffers under
|
| the strokes of his raging terror.
|
| Macduff, the Thane of Fife,
|
| is still in England, and since the tyrant is unable
|
| to get hold of him he resolves to destroy the castle
|
| of the alleged traitor, giving his wife,
|
| children and servants to the sword.
|
| But while Macbeth seeks safety in destruction and bloodshed,
|
| his lady’s strength of mind begins to falter; |
| walking
|
| in her sleep, she constantly tries to wash invisible
|
| blood from her hands — the blood of the murdered King
|
| Duncan. |
| Lady Macbeth dies finally as a victim of her
|
| own madness, of her feelings of guilt.
|
| The tyrant himself suffers from increasing madness
|
| and deep depressions so much so that he can hardly
|
| mourn the death of his wife.
|
| He begins to realise that all his efforts and killings
|
| will neither bring him happiness nor satisfaction.
|
| Yet, on the strength of the witches' predictions,
|
| he still believes himself deceptively safe,
|
| drawing from them the strength to prepare for the impending
|
| battle. |
| Under the leadership of Duncan’s son Malcolm
|
| and Macduff, the English and many Scots have united
|
| and arc marching on Macbeth’s seat,
|
| Dunsinane, with a powerful army.
|
| Faced with these superior troops the tyrant’s men flee |
| from him, until he finally finds himself alone.
|
| Still being convinced of his own invincibility Macbeth
|
| awaits the onslaught of the enemy troops.
|
| Caught in a deadly combat with Macduff,
|
| Macbeth finds out that his opponent was cut from his
|
| mother’s womb and was therefore not born by a woman.
|
| Only then he realises that he has fallen victim to
|
| the witches' prank. |
| Realising the full extent of his
|
| delusion, he comes to his senses and understands that
|
| his own death is imminent.
|
| Yet he does not attempt to flee but faces the battle
|
| with Macduff and is finally slain.
|
| Let the Story begin…
|
| As we know man does not walk the earth alone
|
| but is surrounded by strange creatures and spirits.
|
| Some of these may sometimes try to lure man into their own influence…
|
| for their own entertainment…
|
| and to steal away the most precious gem dwelling in each of us… our soul.
|
| Man may choose the path he follows, but its direction may at times:
|
| not be what it seems…
|
| This tale is about one of the most valiant heroes that
|
| ever walked the Scottish soil.
|
| It tells his glorious deeds, his hopes, his ambitions, his rise…
|
| and his fall… yet it does not start with its protagonist…
|
| rather with its demons…
|
| When shall we three meet again,
|
| in thunder lightning or in rain
|
| When the Hurlyburly 's done,
|
| when the battles lost and won
|
| That will be ere the set of sun
|
| Where the place?
|
| Upon the heath.
|
| There to meet with Macbeth |