by Christopher Barr
By the pricking of my thumbs,
Something wicked this way comes.
All hail, Macbeth!
The
Tragedy of Macbeth has been tackled a number of times in
film and television but most notably are Roman
Polanski’s Macbeth (1971) as well as Orson
Welles’ Macbeth (1948), for television, Patrick
Stewart played a fine Macbeth also. The
course of Macbeth is set by three witches; they plant a seed in the young
warrior’s mind that he shall be king. Macbeth is a political thriller
about a psychopathic killer, a man that falls to the depths of madness to get
what he wants. He kills the current king and all those that could get in
the way of him conquering the thrown and keeping it.
There’s certainly a debate as to whether the
witches were real or not, or were they Macbeth’s ego at play, igniting his Id.
Were they a form of rationalization and exemption for what he’d have to
do….murder? Do we have those little voices in our convoluted minds that
talk us into things like killing another human being for our own superficial
gain? I would argue that they are not real and Macbeth started in a
dormant state of madness and the mythical witches’ prophecy simply stirred the psychopathic
pot.
At the time William Shakespeare wrote the play in
the 17th century, witchcraft was a very believable real
phenomenon. It was practiced by some and feared by others. The
workings of the devil were quite present in those days, a spiritual war between
Satan and the God pushed and pulled the minds of the people and Shakespeare
knew that. So did he use them as metaphorical tools or were they, in his
mind, actual devices to move his vicious murder plot forward?
Magic and witches were everywhere at that time so
writing about witches and sorcery was a political thing to do. The play
was edgy for its time; it’s still edgy today for that matter. Shakespeare
is asking his audience, where do these dark forces come from, is it the witches
or the man that are evil?
Speaking of evil, who was Lady Macbeth, Macbeth’s
partner in crime? Was she a bully, pushing Macbeth into murderous
villainy? Would have Macbeth committed the atrocities that he did without
her at his ear? Was Macbeth a sheep in wolves clothing? Was he
simply a man falling victim to his environment and the circumstances of his relationship
with Lady Macbeth?
Does she make him into a killer? When he states; ‘We
will proceed no further with this business,’ of killing the king. Macbeth at this point is clearly
ambivalent but she argues that he must take what is promised to him. She
essentially used the, ‘are you man enough
to take it’ speech, throwing it in his face. She tells him that if he
goes through with it, he’ll be more than a man but if he doesn’t, he’ll shame
her for life. She clearly had her own
selfish reasons and motivations for pushing him as in her own desire for power.
It’s likely that Macbeth wasn’t so naive that he
could be easily led, so one can interrupt Macbeth as being a man that welcomed
the manipulation. Macbeth could not do this on his own so his mind opened
itself up to falsification and deceit. He wanted to be King, listening to
his wife’s persuasive mind and her scheming voice but he also had a
conversation within his own mind, he had to make his own choice. He had
to contend with the postmodern nature of reality. He had to understand
the bridge that separates his dream world and his imagination, a possible false
creation of a fevered brain, with that of the world outside and beyond his eye. He was clearly conflicted between killing for
advancement and morality, as well as his fear of guilt, that this murder would
bring unbearable guilt and damnation.
Is this
a dagger which I see before me,
The
handle toward my hand
Come,
let me clutchthee.
The dark brooding atmosphere lent itself to supernatural
uneasiness and foreboding. Macbeth holds his hand out for a dagger
suspended it in front of him that he clearly sees but can’t clasp. The
dagger appears as if it is leading him to the murder; that he is being willed
by an agent of fate. The violence in his mind was manifesting itself
before him, hovering in the form of a bloody dagger. Then of course, the
bell rings and frees him of his mind’s images of fear and horror, inviting him
to do his business and kill the king.
We all like to feel important and for others have a
high opinion of us. Some of us develop an over-inflated view of
ourselves. As a result, we have a tendency to get wrapped in a form of
denial about ourselves; we create a false perception and have an inability to
accept the truth. It then becomes painful to accept that mistakes are
possible and when we make them the first reaction is to point the finger
elsewhere. We refuse to think objectively and accept any involvement for
our actions. The inability to accept responsibility for our actions and
behavior is a result of insecurity and arrogance. By taking
responsibility one feels they are admitting to being weak, powerless, that they
may feel they will lose their own sense of value and importance.
I think that is what’s at the heart of Macbeth; a
man torn between his narcissistic desire to rule others and his responsibility
as a human being to share the world with others. Most people struggle with this their entire
lives because most people deep down think that life would be better if they
controlled the world.
Bloody hands and the deed is done, Macbeth is now a
murderer, never to return. He has killed
in battle but that was different so we’re told, first degree murder is more
selfish. The king is dead and Macbeth meets up with his wife, bloody
daggers in hand, his language has abandoned him, portrayed him, as any Forensic
Physiatrist would say, the mind loses its grip on reality while blood drips
from the shaken hands of the murderer. There is no turning back for
Macbeth, he’s done it but he’s not alone. His wife, Lady Macbeth stands
with him, consoles him, washes blood from him.
Macbeth is now the king and must have his rivals
killed. As a result he dreams of his victims while awake, seeing them as
ghosts, he is losing his mind more and more and Lady Macbeth is tasked to hold him
together before he confesses to the world what they have done.
The natural guilt of the man is surfacing, begging
to be exposed and this becomes troublesome for Macbeth for he is King, he became ‘more
than a man’ for his wife so instead of admission, Macbeth continues
his blood bath.
Lady Macbeth suffers a mental turn of events and
begins to sleep walk and hallucinate, rubbing her hands, desperately attempting
to wash the reality of what they did away, while in the company of very
concerned onlookers. She breaks down; she loses the strength she
possessed that pushed Macbeth to action in the first place.
Macbeth at this point has lost it, becoming numb
with a psychopathic temperament, beyond even his wife’s reach. As a
result she kills herself, no longer able to live with herself and her insane
husband. In the beginning she thought of the path they took as a simple
means to an ends, little did she know that she would be the one with the
empathetic warm heart while her husband becomes the maniac. Now after the
deed and many to follow, it’s Macbeth who’s now become cold with malice and who
has a dead wife that couldn’t bare his viciousness.
To-morrow,
and to-morrow, and to-morrow.
Creeps
in this petty pace from day to day,
To the
last syllable of recorded time;
And all
our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way
to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life’s
but a walking shadow, a poor player,
That
struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And
then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by
an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying
nothing.
Macbeth’s nihilistic ‘Tomorrow’ soliloquy in Act. 5
are his words to die by. This existential look at life can only leave one,
feeling sadness for a man that has let himself fall so far, a man that sees the
banality of everyday life as no more than a walking shadow, empty and filled
with aloneness.
This soliloquy was about the meaninglessness of
life, but it’s also about his wife’s death before her time. A time
Macbeth wished to have happen much later, affording him proper time to mourn
for her. But also, with her death, she never produced an heir to the
throne, leaves Macbeth’s royal line cut.
Macbeth gained his crown but at an overwhelming
cost to everything true and right with his life. He mourns at what fools
we all are, how we will kill friends and make enemies all for nothing.
He feels nothing and has nothing more to live for,
his enemies have all come for him and in one last fight to maintain his
meaningless power, Macbeth is killed in battle. His dominion has come to
an end. What set it on such a destructive path in the first place?
Was it the three witches or was it madness resulting from his crazed ambitions?
Shakespeare wants us to know that we could be
Macbeth, we could take his path. Macbeth is not some insane figure for us
all to point and judge. This tale is a tragedy but it’s also a cautionary
tale because none of us are free from insanity.
What we should be taking from this play is the honesty we must offer
ourselves and to those around us in our lives. Being responsible for our
actions and taking that responsibly is how we gain respect from those in our
lives but it’s also how we respect ourselves. I think that was what
Shakespeare wanted for us all.
The magic and what is wonderful about the
psychology of Shakespeare’s play is the depth Macbeth is willing to go to
define his life. This story plays like a huge allegory for hardship of
living itself; it shows that the human mind is open to manipulation when knowledgeable
guidance and understanding is absent.
The lies we tell ourselves and the many lies we are
told by our rulers, that being the governments, corporations and the bankers
that run it all, have all got to stop if we are to survive this civilization
project. Religions and their insane superstitions have got to be seen for
what they are; cons perpetuated by con-men. The organization is the
largest in the world and its selling thin air as its product; it’s an empty
corporation that has no products warehoused in massive buildings. Its
buildings are empty, beautifully designed to fulfill a fantasy to the millions
that believe in it.
People from the ground up have got to stop allowing
those around them to spread what is not backed up by facts and evidence.
If we continue to ‘feel-bad’ for some people and allow them to continue lying
to themselves then the very virus of belief without evidence will spread, as it
has for thousands of years, pouring it’s tale of hope to the meek while the
rich maintain their power and control.
The tragedy of Macbeth is a contemporary story
about corruption, greed and power for a narcissistic need to fulfill a fantasy
of self-glorification. To not believe in god means that it falls to us to
make the world a better place. To do this the fairy tales don’t
necessarily need to stop but they need to stay in the fictional sections at the
local book store. We as a species have to grow up and recognize that if
we don’t do this, we are in support of ignorance and this support will lend
itself to the extinction of humanity as a global community.
Today in our corporate and political climate there
is always a desire for advancement for the sake of money and praise and these
are often fuelled by greed and a will for power. So the possibility of exploiting all the
angles and stepping on the faces of weaker people to ascend to CEO or President,
could and likely result in moral and ethical rationalizations. Like the plight of Macbeth, we can’t stop the
devastating path we are slicing into this planet. If research shows that cell phones are unequivocally
cancerous to the brain, the corporations that manufacture them can’t do a
recall because they are part of what we identify ourselves with. The spread of cell phones on this planet can’t
stop in spite of dangers, physically, psychologically and socially. This is a clear sign of a psychopath whose
rush for power outweighs its empathy for human life. Like Macbeth, our focus on a lust for power as
well as being possessed by raging ambition could lead to our own demise.
Shakespeare will not make us better, and he will
not make us worse, but he may teach us how to overhear ourselves when we talk
to ourselves... he may teach us how to accept change in ourselves as in others,
and perhaps even the final form of change.
–
Harold Bloom
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