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3 answers

Do you mean Macbeth? The real Macbeth, the Shakespearean one, or the Macbeth who kills all his brothers from the old song?

If you mean Shakespeare's take on him, then he's not insane. He's just ambitious, and some witches help feed that ambition so that he does some very bad things to usurp power. But if I was sitting on a jury, no way would I accept the insanity defense for that geiser.

Lady Macbeth, his wife, goes insane though.

2007-03-14 04:33:54 · answer #1 · answered by dude 5 · 0 0

It would take less time to read than to ask all the questions here. It's a pretty good story, anyway. Perhaps you could get an illustrated version if your attention span is low.

By the way, you're going to completely give yourself away as a fake to your teacher if you can't even spell the title character's name correctly.

2007-03-14 11:07:14 · answer #2 · answered by open4one 7 · 0 0

his wife's insistence that he become king at any cost. He ends up murdering his mentor...

2007-03-14 11:11:15 · answer #3 · answered by torqueymonster 3 · 0 0

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