Is Lady Macbeth To Blame

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In Shakespeare’s, thirteenth century tragic play, Macbeth, Macbeth brutally murders several people throughout the tale. Lady Macbeth, sees his evil deeds as zealous and fortifies him. Although Macbeth is the one who commits the actual malefaction of murder and treason, Lady Macbeth is fully responsible for his actions, and should take all the inculpation. She feels evil ambition from the very beginning, and she manipulates Macbeth into carrying out the crime by assuring him that his actions are impeccably justified and he should not feel guilty for his actions. Macbeth blames Lady Macbeth for all his erroneous doings after she dies. One reason that Lady Macbeth holds responsibility for the atrocities Macbeth commits, is because all her ambitions …show more content…

Macbeth remarks to the doctor right after he heard the news of Lady Macbeth’s passing, “She should have died hereafter.// There would have been a time for such a word.// Tomorrow and tomorrow and tomorrow// Creeps in this petty pace from day to day//To the last syllable of recorded time//And all our yesterdays have lighted fools//The way to dusty death.” (5.5.20-26) Macbeth realizes that his life feels frivolous and pointless all because of his deceased wife’s manipulation. He expresses this because he wants Lady Macbeth to feel the same pain that she causes him throughout his downfall because he feels she genuinely deserves it. He realizes that he does not truly love Lady Macbeth and that everything he does for his marriage to survive lies a sham. support this claim with evidence In conclusion, Lady Macbeth should be held more responsible than Macbeth. Lady Macbeth has bad ambitions from the very beginning, and she manipulates Macbeth into carrying out the crime, beyond his will, by assuring him that his action are perfectly fine and that he should not feel remorse for his actions. Macbeth even incriminates Lady Macbeth for all his wrongdoings after she dies. Clearly, she aids Macbeth into becoming a monster that cannot stop his violence. Even though Macbeth does the