Most people believe that Shakespeare used the witches and other elements of the supernatural in the play "Macbeth" because a. it added a dramatic effect to the play and b. the new monarch at that time (James I) was very interested in the supernatural. So Shakespeare probably used this play to impress the king! Also, around the time that Shakespeare was writing this play, a lot of people were persecuted for being "witches", so you could think of "Macbeth" as an early form of satire!
Apparently, Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra
Shakespeare wrote all of his plays for the same reason--to make money. It was his job.
Macbeth did this to inform Lady M about what had happened so far.By this time,Macbeth was qualified for the throne,but it wasn't guaranteed for him to become king.
Yes, William Shakespeare [Baptized April 26, 1564-April 23, 1616] wrote 'The Tragedy of Macbeth'. He most likely wrote the play no earlier than 1603, and no later than 1606 or 1607. The choice of a tragic theme, the harmonization of the play with the interests of the prevailing monarch, the presentation of a range of personality types, and the use of compelling dialogue were hallmarks of 'Macbeth' and of the other Shakespearean tragedies.
I think it's the Macbeth paper
Hecate, in a scene which is always cut from any production of the play because Shakespeare didn't actually write it.
Macbeth.
Macbeth was published in 1623, and William Shakespeare was born in 1564. You do the math! :)
No body Knows for sure. I do not think it was Shakespeare because he write in the Iambic pentameter and this Scene is written in the Iambic tetrameter. Many people think it was Thomas Middleton since the songs the witches sing were afterwards published under his name.
Sometime between 1603 and 1607.
Apparently, Macbeth and Antony and Cleopatra
Romeo & Juiliet Much Ado about Nothing Macbeth
Shakespeare got his plot for Macbeth from Holinshed's Chronicles, which is a history book, not a play. Parts of The Witch by Thomas Middleton were lifted from that rather unsuccessful play and plopped down into the middle of Macbeth, but it is suspected that this was not done by Shakespeare but by some later editor.
Shakespeare wrote "Macbeth" in unrhymed iambic pentameter, also known as blank verse. This metrical pattern consists of lines with five pairs of alternating unstressed and stressed syllables.
One of the fantasies of readers of Shakespeare is that someone came up to Shakespeare and said, "You should write a play about Falstaff in love" or "You should write a play about Hamlet", or "You should write a play about witches and Scottish history". There is no evidence that anything of this kind ever happened. In particular, there is no evidence that any king or queen of England ever told Shakespeare how to do his job. Choosing the right story for his plays was Shakespeare's job. Like anyone else in the marketing business, he went with what was trending: his character of Falstaff was hugely popular so he wrote sequels; Hamlet was a proven stage play and revenge tragedies an established genre; Macbeth was written just after the Gunpowder Plot at a time when supporting the king would appear to be a politically correct and popular move. (Shakespeare seems to have miscalculated on this last one; the indications are that Macbeth was not a popular play with either the public or the court)
Shakespeare wrote all of his plays for the same reason--to make money. It was his job.
Macbeth did this to inform Lady M about what had happened so far.By this time,Macbeth was qualified for the throne,but it wasn't guaranteed for him to become king.