In Act I, they think he is brave and honorable; in Act V, they think he is an insane tyrant who must be defeated.
In Act 1, the soldiers view Macbeth as a valiant and honorable warrior. However, by Act 5, their feelings have shifted due to his tyrannical rule and brutal actions, leading them to see him as a ruthless and despised leader.
The soldiers are on night watch at the castle in the opening of the play "Macbeth." They are accompanied by Banquo and Macbeth.
In Act 1 Scene 7 of Macbeth, when Macbeth is alone and speaking his thoughts out loud, this is called a soliloquy. It is a dramatic device used to reveal a character's innermost thoughts and feelings to the audience.
At the end of the play, they feel that Macbeth is a murderous tyrant, but at the beginning they thought he was a brave and good man.
In Act 5, Scene 5 of Macbeth, Macbethβs soldiers desert him and join forces with Malcolm's army. Due to the overwhelming opposition he faces, Macbeth realizes that his reign is doomed, leading to his desperation and ultimate downfall.
Macbeth is hiding the fact that he has murdered King Duncan from his wife, Lady Macbeth. He keeps this information from her to protect her and also to avoid facing her reaction to his heinous act.
This is a hard question to answer because we do not hear much from the soldiers in Macbeth's army after Act 1 Scene 2, where the bloody sergeant praises him to the skies. The bloody sergeant was certainly proud of Macbeth as a courageous soldier. As the play goes on, however, we do not hear much from the soldiers serving under Macbeth, although we see him mistreat messengers by calling them "cream-faced loon" and the like. It's hard to imagine that it was much fun being Seyton, Macbeth's batman, being commanded to put on and take off his armour all the time. The only word we hear from common soldiery about Macbeth late in the play is in Act V Scene 2 where a number of Scottish lords, who have decided to defect to Malcolm, discuss the situation. One of them, Angus, says, "Those he commands move only in command, nothing in love." The scene is intended to show that loyalty to Macbeth is waning rapidly, both among the lords, whom we see, and among the common servants and soldiers, who we hear about.
Lady Macbeth totally sucks Macbeth's dick right now.
Young Siward is the first to fight Macbeth in Act V. Macbeth kills young Siward.
Lady Macbeth
In Act 2 of Macbeth, King Duncan is murdered by Macbeth in his sleep. Lady Macbeth also kills the two sleeping guards to frame them for the murder.
Macbeth was not a vassal of King Duncan. Macbeth's act of killing King Duncan would be considered regicide because he unlawfully killed his king, who was his sovereign and ruler.
Why do you think Macbeth is startled by the witches prediction's in act 1 of Macbeth by Shakespeare