Answer:
C. his tragic flaws helps to cause his downfall
Step-by-step explanation:
Macbeth is a tragic hero because he started the play as a good man, but the manipulations of the Weird Sisters and his significant other drew out his baser characteristics. This prompts Macbeth's ethical debasement and ruin by the play's end.
It is clear Macbeth starts the play as an unwavering companion and good man. At the point when the Captain talks about the fight, Macbeth is portrayed as "fearless," even as "Valor's flunky" (Act I, Scene 2, lines 18, 21). Because of Macbeth's extraordinary unwaveringness and administration to the crown, Duncan portrays him as "valiant" and "commendable" (Act I, Scene 2, line 26). Moreover, Macbeth's significant other, the individual who might probably realize him best, portrays him as "full o' th' milk of human benevolence" (Act I, Scene 5, line 17). Macbeth endeavors to escape the arrangement to slaughter Duncan, disclosing to Lady Macbeth, "We will proceed no further in this business" because his own ambition is not enough to compel him to murder his friend, kinsman, and king (Act I, Scene 7, line 34).