The resolution often ties up the loose ends in a play, but it does not always include a happy ending. From your reading of act V, briefly describe the resolution of Macbeth.
Answers
Act V of the play Macbeth is the concluding act of the play which highlights the end of Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, and their evil deeds. When Macbeth gets to know about Lady Macbeth’s unnatural death, he becomes numb. In great shock, he gives a speech in which he exerts about the uncertainty and unpredictability of death. Later he is informed by a servant that the Birnam Wood is moving towards Dunsinane. In despair, he shouts out loud at the servant but realizes that the prophecy of the witches is coming true. He realizes that in the run of attaining the kingdom he had fallen short of love, friends, and honor. His greed has left him alone. Though he thinks about the losses he had faced in his life, still he steps to the conclusion that he’ll fight until his death.
The drama Macbeth and the conflicts in the story reach a resolution in act V, Scene VIII.
Macduff faces Macbeth and starts fighting him.
Macbeth thinks that he has nothing to be afraid as his enemy can harm him.
Macduff tells conflictingly about the statement, not of woman born.
Macbeth probably knew that he had to face death and that the witches’ zone has misguided him.
When Macduff stabbed Macbeth to death, he got rids the throne of Scotland like a self-serving tyrant.
Malcolm, becomes the king of Scotland, lawfully.
The greed of Macbeth for power, and in his attempt to become a powerful individual in the country, lead him to construct to commit lowest crimes.