Hecate is initially displeased with the witches for involving themselves with Macbeth without consulting her. She feels they have been careless and reckless in their actions. However, she eventually decides to join forces with them to further manipulate Macbeth.
No, Hecate has no interest in Macbeth particularly. She's ticked off that the other witches told him things without giving her a chance to get in on the fun. But she is much more interested in the happy frolicking that apparently is what witches do.
Hecate would not punish the witches in Macbeth, she was only angry that she has been excluded from their meetings with Macbeth; as Hecate is the Greek Goddess of witchcraft she could be seen as the ruler of the three witches, with her words "And you all know, security/Is mortals' chiefest enemy." she ensured his downfall, so no she should and would not do so in Macbeth.
In Act 3 Scene 5 she tells the witches to make false or deceptive prophecies to Macbeth when he comes to visit them in Act IV Scene I, thus giving him a false sense of security. "And you all know security is mortals' chiefest enemy" she says. It appears that Middleton, or whoever wrote these lovely lines of rhyming iambic tetrameter, anticipated the Gestapo, the KGB and Homeland Security.
No, her character does not appear to have more than the most shallow emotions. She is put off because she wasn't invited to join in with the other witches.
Yes, or rather for excluding her.
She is the one who, after finding out that 'her' witches (the witches that she taught to do things like casting spells etc) were talking and "spilling too many beans" to Macbeth about the future, she, as the head witch, shows Macbeth the Apparitions, and she is the one who is a little more evil than the witches, as they did not try to trick Macbeth as much as she did, (she said herself that "security/is mortals' chiefest enemy") only obeyed her orders or had some fun.
Hecate admiring the witches' potion in Shakespeare's Macbeth can be seen as her approval of their manipulation and deception. By praising their work, she is encouraging their mischievous and evil actions, highlighting her role as a supernatural force guiding their actions towards darkness and chaos.
Hecate is upset in Macbeth because she feels that the three witches have been meddling in Macbeth's affairs without involving her. She believes that they have been giving Macbeth false confidence and leading him astray, which goes against their practice of working together as a team. Additionally, she is angry that they did not consult her before making their prophecies known to Macbeth.
Why do you think Macbeth is startled by the witches prediction's in act 1 of Macbeth by Shakespeare
I think that Macbeth was at first not as "worried" about the witches and their curses as then on in the play he finds out that every thing that the witches has been tellin him are true.
Normally, people would not blame the witches. They just said things and Macbeth reacted by doing things. The witches can only be held to blame if you think that Macbeth had no choice in his actions. But if he had no choice, how come the witches do have a choice?
The three witches from Macbeth are not given specific names within the play. They are referred to as the "three sisters," or the "weird sisters," or even just the "witches." They are supposed to represent the destinies of the characters in the play.
Although the people of that era believed in witches, the witches in Macbeth were very probably not portrayed as frightening. The very silly scenes involving songs and the headwitch Hecate (which were likely not written by Shakespeare, but were written also in the Jacobean Era) make the witches sillier than the fairies in Midsummer Night's Dream, and although these scenes are never played nowadays, there is every reason to think that this was actually how the witches were played at first. This may have been the only way to get them onstage in a time when people would have been genuinely frightened of representations of real witches.
The three witches in Shakespeare's play Macbeth predict that Macbeth will become Thane of Cawdor and King of Scotland, and that Banquo's descendants will become kings. Many get confused and think that one of the predictions is that Macbeth will become Thane of Glamis. However this is not a prediction; when the witches meet Macbeth, he is already Thane of Glamis. They also predicted that they would kill him and rape him
The three witches in Macbeth represent fate, the supernatural, and the destructive potential of unchecked ambition. They serve as instigators of Macbeth's downfall by providing prophecies that manipulate his actions and lead him to his tragic end.
The witches gain Macbeth's trust by accurately predicting that he will become the Thane of Cawdor and eventually king. This prophecy appeals to Macbeth's ambition and desires, leading him to believe in their supernatural powers. The witches' predictions influence Macbeth's actions and gradually contribute to his downfall.
Macbeth attempts to act casual about the witches prophecies and lies to Banquo when he tells him he doesn't think about the prediction at all. In actuality, not only is it on his mind, but he is planning to kill Duncan to make the prophecy come true.