How does Shakespeare make Macbeth(TM)s crisis of conscience dramatically effective in acts 1 and 2?

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How does Shakespeare make Macbeth's crisis of conscience dramatically effective in acts 1 and 2?

A person's conscience is affected by their surroundings, what they experience, what people tell them and their environment in which they live. Macbeth is set in a time where war is going on and things of a gothic nature happen often throughout the country. In the 1600s, as James I was king, the rate at which witches were persecuted increased dramatically. James I was a man who was obsessed with witchcraft, so when he became king his ideas spread and an atmosphere of fear of witches spread throughout Britain. James I even appointed a witch finder general, Sir Matthew Hopkins. Hopkins' job was to go to towns and villages and find and persecute witches.

Witches were feared and hated across Britain. A person living in 15th century Britain must have had some dark and gothic thoughts in their conscience.

We know from the start that this play is going to be of a dark, violent nature because the start of the play consists of three witches talking in thunder and lightning. In the 1600s, thunder and lightning were seen as signs of bad things happening. Act1 Scene1 ends with the witches saying together:

"Fair is foul, and foul is fair, Hover through the fog and filthy air."

Act1 Scene1 sets a dark gothic atmosphere at the start of the play. Act1 Scene2 also contains many gothic and bloody things:

"reeking wounds"

"he unseamed him from the nave to th'chaps"

"memorise another Golgotha".

When the captain talks about Golgotha, he is talking about religious Christian history and this may contrast with the witchcraft in the play because Christianity opposes witchcraft. The first time Macbeth is described, he is referred to as:

"brave Macbeth".

If Macbeth was often praised and described in a good way it must of affected his conscience and made him feel good about himself, it could of even made him cocky and arrogant making him think he is better than other people.

Macbeth's first words are:

"So foul and fair a day I have not seen."

Having said this, it may mean that conflict and insecurity exist in Macbeth's mind and therefore there is something affecting his conscience. These words are also very similar to the witches' last lines in Act1 Scene1 and therefore we can predict that the witches can supernaturally have an affect on Macbeth. Banquo asks Macbeth why he is scared of the witches' sayings and this is the first possible hint that Macbeth isn't noble and good, maybe he has had these thought already:
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"Good sir, why do you start and seem to fear things that do sound so fair?"

Instead of dismissing the witches' words as rubbish, Macbeth wants to know more:

"Stay, you imperfect speakers. Tell me more."

These can be the first signs that Macbeth may have a crisis of conscience because before he asked the witches to speak more, he feared what they said. He doesn't know whether he likes what he is hearing or he doesn't. Macbeth's conscience begins to have thoughts of murder in Act1 Scene3:

"horrid image"

"horrible imaginings"
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