Sunday, October 13, 2019
evilmac Evil Defined in Shakespeares Macbeth and Beowulf :: comparison compare contrast essays
      Evil Defined in Macbeth and Beowulf                For centuries evil was defined by human  preoccupation, and it was often     indicated in the English literature.  From Beowulf to Macbeth,   people's     perception on the nature of evil had matured and became more complex.                In Beowulf's period, evil was simply defined based  on outer appearances and     actions. The author of Beowulf described the evil Grendel as a fearsome  monster:     "He(with sharp claws)...snatched up thirty men, smashed them."    For the same     reason,  Grendel's mother was also considered evil although she merely  wanted to     revenge her son.  The last evil character in the story was the  Dragon.  He     killed the Geats and burned their homes with his breath of fire.    Monster and     evil certainly had the same meaning in the Pre-Christian time.                As Christian was introduced, a new definition of  evil that concentrated on     human values and thoughts had emerged.  The Christian believed that the  seven     deadly sins were the cause of evil.  Thus in the play Macbeth, Macbeth's  tragic     flaws were actually the deadly sins. They were greedy and envy.  Macbeth  was not     satisfied with his current position, "Thane of Glamis," and not even his  newly     gained "Thane of Cawdor" would please him.  He had only one thing on his  mind,     the throne.  When he became the king, he envied Banquo's having heirs  who would     be rivals for the throne.  The Christian also developed the theory of  the great     chain of being.  It basically stated that a person could not and was not  allowed     to change his social status.  Thus in the play,  everyone  eventually turned     against Macbeth, who had broken the great chain of being by taking the  throne     from the rightful king.  At the end, Macbeth died as an evil being who  had     broken all the Christian rules.                The nature of evil also became unclear as it got  more complex.  In Macbeth,     the play began with the three witches' meeting.  To a first-time reader,  it     would appear that these "weird sister" were the evil ones, because it was  a     common human perception.   Who could be more evil than a witch who  vowed to     punish a sailor only because his wife cursed her and refused to give her  some     					    
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