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Who Is Responsible For The Downfall Of Lady Macbeth

803 Words4 Pages

Max Amaral
ENG 2D
Mrs. Cooper
2 June 2023

Lady Macdeath
Lady Macbeth is the embodiment of Macbeth’s hamartia and ultimate downfall. Macbeth is a tragic play by William Shakespeare that shows the corrupting influence of a person because of too much ambition as an honourable Scottish Thane submits to murder and violence to take the throne, which ultimately leads to his own downfall. Lady Macbeth is the embodiment of Macbeth’s hamartia and ultimate downfall because of her ambition to seize power, manipulation and her emotional instability; Macbeth would be a thriving Thane of Glamis and Cawdor if it weren’t for her.
All throughout the play, Lady Macbeth proves how her ambition to seize power is responsible for Macbeth’s hamartia and downfall. …show more content…

A time this is portrayed is when she manipulates Macbeth to murder King Duncan. She asserts to him, “What beast was ’t, then, that made you break this enterprise to me? 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” (1.7.46-51). Lady Macbeth manipulates Macbeth to kill King Duncan by questioning his masculinity by saying that he would be a greater man if he killed the King. Lady Macbeth exerts her manipulative prowess once again when she reveals her plan to manipulate King Duncan. Lady Macbeth states to Macbeth, “Look like th’ innocent flower, but be the serpent under’t” (1.5.64-65). Lady Macbeth shows her manipulative motive to Macbeth by stating this. She is implying to Macbeth that he should appear innocent and loyal, like a harmless flower, while secretly planning and carrying out his treacherous act as a snake lurking beneath a flower's petals. Furthermore, Lady Macbeth manipulates others by persuading them to believe that she and Macbeth bear no responsibility for the murder of Duncan. This manipulation is shown when she cries, “Woe, alas! What, in our house?” (2.3.83). Lady Macbeth's true manipulative intentions become apparent as she and Macbeth bear responsibility for the murder. Her deceitful nature is exposed when she feigns shock and cries out upon hearing of Duncan's murder, showcasing

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