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Who Is Lady Macbeth

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People can effortlessly read a piece of literature and fabricate a big idea for the piece, the reason for it being written. Often times our explanations of stories are simple and easily detected, hardly anyone breaks the surface and digs deeper for a purpose that is not primitively recognized. This essay will be one of the few with complex answers, that require time and thinking to understand. Throughout the play, Macbeth, a common theme was flipping the scripts per say and being the model of who you aren't supposed to be, despite the thoughts of others; for this reason Shakespeare uses character’s yearning for something greater in respect to what it means to be human. You can see this through the motif of animals and the actions of characters. …show more content…

Lady Macbeth took on assertive, ruthless, and guiltless qualities; however, she was once the gentle lady she is presumed, by society, to be. In Act 1. Scene 5. Lines 45-51. Lady Macbeth pleads to the spirits to be robbed of her womanly tendencies “ Come, you spirits that tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here, and fill me from crown to the toe top-full of direst cruelty. Make thick my blood. Stop up th’ access and passage to remorse…” In this bona fide action of getting rid of her benevolence she portrayed compassion toward Macbeth; in light of her knowing Macbeth couldn’t do the dirty deeds required of him, she did them herself. This showed a great deal of Lady Macbeth’s emulation; not only did Shakespeare use these lines to show Lady Macbeth’s desire to be greater, but he also used them to tell readers as a whole that the set ideas we have for ourselves, that we believe cannot be broken nor changed, can truly be anything if our drive is vigorous enough. The spirits Lady Macbeth called to were simply a metaphor, the thing that gave her the qualities she desired was her strong …show more content…

In Macbeth character's eagerness can be distinguished by the animals they are said to be, at first Macbeth was described as an eagle compared to a sparrow in which his enemies were said to be. Macbeth was brave, ruthless, and had no regards for the people who stood against him. This can be seen in Act 1. Scene 2. Lines 16-23. “ For brave Macbeth—well he deserves that name— disdaining fortune, with his brandished steel, which smoked with bloody execution, like valor’s minion carved out his passage till he faced the slave; which ne’er shook hands, nor bade farewell to him, till he unseamed him from the nave to th’ chops, and fixed his head upon our battlements.” At this time, the only thing Macbeth strived to do was please the great King Duncan, his most loyal companion, and that is exactly what he did with that bloody win. The glory from his success did not take long to go to his head, within hours Macbeth began to conjure up the idea that he could be King of the land. In Act 1. Scene 3. Lines 51. Macbeth discusses being King with the three witches, another metaphoric persona, “ All hail, Macbeth, that shalt be king hereafter! ” As Macbeth’s longing to be King grows his old self begins to die, becoming less and less sane with every desire he has. His yearning for power drives him to do the unthinkable,

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