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Saturday, June 1, 2019

Essay --

Analyzing the Feminine Macbeth is a range where female characters have a big influence in terms of the direction of where the male characters will end up. Male Characters such as Macbeth build desperate ambition that leads him into a path full of consequences based on prophecies, and influences enforced by women. This desperate ambition makes a big influence on the path of the play. Female characters such as the tercet witches and Lady Macbeth play around with characters such as Macbeth who is probably the well-nigh important character in the play. By encountering, telling him seductive prophecies and manipulating him, to make sure that Macbeth overcome his obstacles bandage Macbeth not knowing that later on in his life these prophecies will become true but with full of consequences. These three Agents of fate whose prophecies hold the necessary and this cruel and highly ambitious Lady Macbeth use female methods such as, manipulation to achieve power which shows that in the play women can be faraway more frightening and ambitious than the male characters because of the paths available to them due to genderThe three witches also known as the three weird sisters are three witches with dark thoughts and unconscious temptations to evil. Although the witches are servants of Hecate, These three seem to be very independent and very powerful in fact the three witches are the most dangerous characters in the play, being both very powerful and wicked. Through the play these three speak in in rhyming lines, their most noted and most repeated line is Double, double, toil and trouble, / Fire burn and cauldron bubble which is said in most of the scenes in which they ... ...proved that they can be as ambitious and as violent as men through their actions and intentions. Nunez 7 Works Cited Page1)Allcock, Bradley . The Roles of Masculinity and Femininity in Macbeth. 12. 2009. Web. 12. 2009.2 ) Asp, Carolyn. BMCC Library outside(a) Access. BMCC Library Remote Access. N.p., 1981. Web.11Dec.2013.3) Daniel, Albright. BMCC Library Remote Access. BMCC Library Remote Access. N.p., 17 Mar. 2005. Web. 11 Dec. 2013. .

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