In Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Macbeth, Lady Macbeth manipulates and demeans her husband in order to get what she wants and make herself feel better. Lady Macbeth thinks highly of Macbeth but thinks that he is to easy going to get to the top. When they first come up with the plan to kill Duncan, Lady Macbeth forces the plan on Macbeth. “Th’ unguarded Duncan, what not put upon/ his spongy officers, who shall bear the guilt/of our great quell?” (1.7.70-72).She tells Macbeth a couple of times that killing Duncan is what needs to happen. Up until the death of Duncan she thinks of her husband as a coward. After Macbeth killed Duncan, Lady Macbeth had no sympathy for him. Lady Macbeth states: “Go get some water, / and wash this
Macbeth is on trial for the murder of King Duncan this evidence is to prosecute him to get the justice that he so rightfully deserves. Macbeth was loyal to the king and he kills the king anyway by doing so he goes against everything that that he stands for. “The service and the loyalty i one in doing it pays itself your highness part is to receive our duties and our duties are to you the throne.(1.4.25-28) Macbeth is saying the loyalty to the throne and his services is all that he needs.
Lady Macbeth is very tricky and sly with her actions and tone of voice by insulting her husbands manliness. She says, “When you durst do it, then you were a man; And to be more than what you were, you would be so much more the man” (i. vii. 56-58). If Lady Macbeth had not humiliated Macbeth’s courage as a man, than it is very likely that he wouldn’t have killed Duncan. Lady Macbeth provided that extra push that Macbeth needed to commit such an evil deed.
Lady Macbeth gives Macbeth the first push to kill Duncan, and she wants to be ruthless, feel no remorse so that she and her husband will successfully kill Duncan. She desires to “stop up th’ access and passage to remorse” (Shakespeare 1.5.51) so that she will not feel bad about the murder. She persuades Macbeth to kill Duncan, but he struggles afterward when he does not follow the plan and forgets to put back the daggers he cannot face the evil act he has committed. Lady Macbeth is satisfied after Macbeth is king, but that is not enough for him any longer. Eventually the killings take a toll on Macbeth’s mental state, and the guilt he begins to feel is unbearable. Macbeth kills Duncan and then says “this is a sorry sight”
Lady Macbeth was most responsible for the death of King Duncan. It’s clear that there were a few people involved leading up to the death of King Duncan, but the most important was Lady Macbeth. No one played a more important role than herself in making the devious plan for Macbeth to become king. She was the obvious mastermind behind the murder. Even when Macbeth revealed his discontent with the situation, she masterfully manipulated and goaded Macbeth to do things he couldn’t bring himself to.
In Act Two, King Duncan gives Lady Macbeth a diamond which in my opinion is a poor idea since she plans a murder plot against him. King Duncan should give Macbeth noise-silencing headphones so that when Lady Macbeth is attempting to convince Macbeth to kill Duncan, he can just ignore her. This would be a life-saving gift for Duncan to give since the only reason that Macbeth actually follows through with the plan is because Lady Macbeth questions Macbeth’s manhood to an extent too far for even a person as conniving as she. King Duncan should give Banquo a shield as a gift in order for Banquo to protect himself in Act Three from the murderers. If Banquo receives a shield, he would not be killed, and he could have eventually figured out who kills King Duncan.
It has been one year since I became King of Scotland and promised to restore order in the country, and every day has been a struggle. When, a year ago, Macduff finally killed evil Macbeth, the people of Scotland felt great relief, but they were also very shaken. Unfortunately, Macbeth had not only murdered many innocent people, he had also killed the Scottish people’s confidence in their leaders. I was faced with the task of rebuilding the country and its faith in me. My original plan was to start by giving myself the time to mourn and honor my dead father and learn from his experiences.
Many believe the death of King Duncan was solely Macbeth’s responsibility, but other factors and voices play into the process of his death. Yes, many will say that because Macbeth physically put the dagger into Duncan he is most responsible. “That tears shall drown the wind. I have no spur/ To prick the sides of my intent” (I.vi.26-27)
Can water cleanse the act of murder from one’s hand? In the play Macbeth written by William Shakespeare, Lady Macbeth states, “A little water will clear us of this deed” (2.2.67) with respect to remove the responsibility of Duncan’s murder from her soul. Initially, Lady Macbeth is depicted as a strong, passionate, powerful woman who plans a murder with ease. However, throughout the play, she experiences a significant transition as guilt and her conscience begins to consume her. Although Lady Macbeth begins as a very dominant and determined person, as the play develops, she loses her sanity and inevitably faces doom and her demise due to the consequences of the murder.
Throughout the scene, Macbeth is inside the castle contemplating whether he should kill Duncan or not whilst the servants set the table for the evening. During this we see that he has an understanding of the consequences and even that he sees the act of murdering the king as an unforgivable sin, however, the main thing he struggles with is not only the idea of killing a man but also the fact he is a relative who values and trusts him. He wishes for the murder to soon be completed and regrets the fact he possesses “vaulting ambition”. Further on in the scene Lady Macbeth enters and we get the first glimpse at the themes of gender and ambition in this passage. Macbeth tells her that he does not want to go ahead with the murder as he realises the only reason there is to kill is for his own ambition, however, Lady Macbeth has a different idea.
The fact that King Duncan’s murder was on a stormy night, shows the relationship between Macbeth and his faith as it is a sign of god raining down on what he has just done. This idea was heightened when Macbeth was in the church being crowned as King. There was visible Light beaming through the church windows on the crowd, but not Macbeth or Lady Macbeth. This shows the view that God has on Macbeth over what he has done, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are hiding in the dark behind the murder of King Duncan. Yet, we see that the rest of the town is in full light apart from the front row where 3 people are looking to floor and are in the dark.
After all, if she can persuade her husband to murder King Duncan, they will be able to take the throne. Lady Macbeth bitingly criticizes her husband when she disagrees with him. She is extremely determined and ambitious, and does not hesitate to belittle Macbeth when she
In Act 1, Scene 7, Lines 56-57, "When you durst do it, then you were a man; And to be more than what you were, you would be so much more the man", Lady Macbeth orchestrates Macbeth’s self-esteem by taunting his manliness when Macbeth doesn’t plan on following through with her plan. Moments later, she tells him how he should act and what he needs to do, in Act 1, Scene 5, Lines 71-75, “When Duncan is asleep...look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under’t.” She successfully augments Macbeth’s ambition and exhorts him to commit atrocities. After Duncan’s murder, Macbeth no longer values Lady Macbeth’s opinions- his actions are rash and selfish because they are made promptly. Interaction between Lady Macbeth and Macbeth falters since Macbeth is now swept up with erasing his tracks. The two perish as individuals- Macbeth is miserable with guilt caused by cold- blooded Lady Macbeth’s attribution of influence and plan. But instead of comforting her husband and talking him out of murdering more people, Lady Macbeth only gives one feeble attempt.
Ladies and Gentlemen of the court, the evidence shows that Lady Macbeth compelled Macbeth to murder King Duncan and set him down a path of crime and destruction. She is as much to blame as Macbeth. The facts of the case are, Macbeth killed Duncan by his own hand, but he hired assassins to commit the murders of Banquo and Fleance. At the beginning of Lady Macbeth and Macbeth’s marriage the people can see they act as equals, one does not outrank the other. As time progresses her true colors start to seep through onto the surface. Lady Macbeth portrayed herself as power-hungry, she will do anything and everything to deem the family name as dominant and successful.
The tragedy of Macbeth included many deaths, but there was no given answer about who was held accountable for all the deaths. The killing of King Duncan was triggered by both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. Even though both were involved, Lady Macbeth was most responsible for the killing of King Duncan because she is the more evil character, she manipulated her husband into doing it, and because she established the details of the plan to kill Duncan.
Lady Macbeth has the power over her husband to persuade him into doing anything she requests. She manipulates Macbeth with incredible efficiency by overruling all of his thoughts and changing his perspective on the present. Even though the many tasks that need to be completed are difficult to understand why they need to be done, Lady Macbeth will always convince Macbeth to do it. Her husband often tells her that she has a “masculine soul” which is obvious due to her murderous and envious actions. When the time came to kill king Duncan, Macbeth believes that his wife has gone insane and tells her that the crime they were about to commit was a horrible idea. As a result of his questioning, Lady Macbeth says that executing the crime will show his loyalty to her. On the night of the assassination Lady Macbeth watched the guards of the castle become drunk and unaware of what was going on. Lady Macbeth sent her husband into the castle to kill King Duncan. The married couple fled the scene leaving the guards covered in the evidence. Lady Macbeth and Macbeth are stained with the blood of their victims and the feeling of guilt in their stomach.