This is the 3rd and final in a series of the supernatural, as one of the themes, in the play Macbeth.
To read the first and second in this series then click on the links below.
Click here for ‘Macbeth themes: The supernatural part I’
Click here for ‘Macbeth themes: The supernatural part II’
To fully understand this article, you will need to have read the preceding two articles. However to provide a brief summary of the previous two articles, we looked at some of these points:
- King James I and his interest and firm opposition to witchcraft.
- The evil nature of witches as believed by English people at that time and in the play.
- Macbeth’s interactions with the witches.
- Lady Macbeth invoking evil spirits to remove any morality or compassion from her in order that she will be ruthless in getting the throne for Macbeth.
- The ghost of Banquo.
In this article we will look at how Macbeth meets the witches again.
Act 3, scene 5
Prior to Macbeth meeting the witches for the second and final time, and after the scene where he sees the ghost of Banquo, in Act 3, scene 5, we see Hecate and the three witches.
Who is Hecate?
Hecate was the ancient Greek goddess of witchcraft and is thus the supreme leader of all witches. She is shown in Macbeth angry with the three witches for delivering prophesies to Macbeth without her prior knowledge or consent.
The first witch says right at the start of the scene.
‘Why, how now, Hecate! You look angerly.’
To which Hecate replies:
‘Have I not reason, beldams as you are?
However Hecate, an incarnation of evil, ironically views Macbeth as being far from good. She says to the witches that their telling Macbeth prophesies without her permission is not good even more so due to Macbeth’s very flawed personality.
Great business must be wrought ere noon.’
Then she says that from a droplet of the moon she will create ‘artificial sprites’, i.e. spirits that:
‘As by the strength of their illusion
Shall draw him on to his confusion.’
The witches if they do give knowledge or information, do not give such whose nature is that it enlightens, benefits or provides guidance. Their knowledge is given in a cryptic, unclear form and causes ‘confusion’ with the word itself being mentioned here by Hecate herself, the leader of all witches.
What James I and others strongly opposed to witchcraft would say from this, is that the play proves no true, beneficial knowledge emanates from the witches. None of the sort that helps humanity to progress. Not the knowledge that great scientists provide mankind. Rather than light or rays of sunshine in the form of knowledge coming from witches, there is murky, fogginess in terms of unclear prophecies and darkness in the form of destruction and bloodshed. Hecate then says of Macbeth:
She knows that the prophesies which the witches give him shall lull him in to a false sense of security and make him ‘scorn death’. Hecate’s plans for Macbeth are not good. They do not involve warning him and saving him, but telling him things that will end in his destruction. She is no friend of Macbeth but an ‘enemy’. By extension witches are no friends of humans, including those who in the era of James I, may wish to approach them for prophesies and knowledge.
The second witch says:
Then in unison the three witches chant:
‘Double, double toil and trouble,
Macbeth then enters and similar to the contempt that Hecate herself has for these witches he addresses them in a derisory tone.
Macbeth says later:
‘I conjure you by that which you profess—
They do that in the form of three apparitions coming from the cauldron. The first is a floating head which says:
Beware the thane of Fife. Dismiss me. Enough.’
This prophecy is not overly cryptic or confusing. No oxymorons. Macbeth would know that Macduff is someone he should be worried about.
In fact Macbeth himself is quite appreciative of the apparition’s seemingly benevolent act of warning him and he says:
‘Whate’er thou art, for thy good caution, thanks.
Thou hast harped my fear aright. But one word more—’
However the apparition has already turned and the witches tell him the second apparition will speak now. The second apparition, a bloody child, emerges and says:
‘Be bloody, bold, and resolute. Laugh to scorn
‘Then live, Macduff. What need I fear of thee?
So Macbeth says ‘Then live, Macduff’ and a few seconds later ‘Thou shalt not live’. If he were to be issuing orders to someone about Macduff, it would be ‘don’t kill him’ and then ‘kill him’. Macbeth is clearly not firm or consistent in his thinking. He is confused.
Macbeth then sees the third apparition, a child with a crown holding a tree, who tells him
‘Macbeth shall never vanquished be until
Macbeth thus concludes that this is impossible and that he will not be killed but live his life until he dies a normal or ‘natural’ death. His reaction to the third apparition’s prophecy includes the words:
‘Sweet bodements! Good!’
However this latent evil which resided within Macbeth would not have been activated if it were not for the witches prophecies, for it is their prophecies which cause him to kill first Duncan and then Macduff’s family.
Towards the end of this scene we witness Macbeth seeing a line of eight kings with the last one holding a mirror (or ‘glass’ in the original stage directions), these kings were a reference to the kings of the Stuart dynasty with the eighth one actually being James I. This is yet again another example of Shakespeare trying to please or compliment James I. In fact the whole play could arguably be seen from a certain perspective as a giant compliment and supplement to James I book on witchcraft ‘Daemonologie’. Banquo himself is believed to have been the ancestor of king James I.