Macbeth Essay
Essay by 24 • October 4, 2010 • 1,407 Words (6 Pages) • 2,154 Views
A Character in Her Own Right
Behind all the great men of Shakespeare, there is a women close behind, who is often over looked. These women are just as crucial of a character as the men they follow. In William Shakespeare's Macbeth, Macbeth is a mere tool, there to carry out orders for his wife, both of whom desire nothing more than to rule. Together they will do anything, including murder, achieve their goal. Lady Macbeth proves to be a tragic figure and possess every capability that a man is able to. Although female, Lady Macbeth has proven herself as a central influence to the plot of the story, her strong, individualistic ways and ruthless plans prove to be the rise and downfall of her husbands reign as king and death, as well as her own.
When the reader is first introduced to Lady Macbeth in acts one and two, they receive some insight into who she is and what she stands for. Lady Macbeth is reading a letter from her husband and learns of his desire to be king and to what lengths he claims he will go to achieve it. In her response, the presence of a realistic mind set is obvious. She frankly tells her husband that he can not be a good man while taking what is not his. She gets straight to the point and uses other tactics of persuasion to make sure her point is clear. "Hie thee hither. / That I may pour my spirits in thine ear/ And chastise with the valor of my tongue/ All that impedes thee from the golden round" (I.iiiii.24-27). Here
she is using her sexual hold over Macbeth to further her power over him and get her own way. Lady Macbeth also proves to be truly ruthless as she wishes herself a man filled with cruelty and thick blood so she will not feel any remorse. She also speaks of bashing babies against the wall and wishing for night so that her knife can not see what is does and heaven can not tell her to stop. Lady Macbeth will not let her husband back out of the plot and clearly has thought of everything so the murder goes just the way she wants. She does everything except the actual deed. Lady Macbeth states to her husband, "My hands are of your color, but I shame/ To wear a heart so white" (II.ii.61-62). She makes sure to keep her self innocent; she believes she will never feel guilt or remorse for the death of King Duncan. She is the one who must keep the masquerade up and pick up the slack her husband lacks. She continues to direct him after the murder is committed, and not let him go insane. She cleans the daggers and directs the framing of the guards. The next morning she acts as if it is all a big surprise that the King is dead, sealing her innocence with the other characters, but showing to the reader her true self.
It is in act three that the reader starts to see another side of Lady Macbeth. She starts to reflect on her action and take into consideration what feelings her husband may be having. "Naught's had, all's spent,/ Where our desire is got without content./ Ð''Tis safer to be that which we destroy/ Than by destruction dwell in doubtful joy"(III.ii.6-9). Lady Macbeth is realizing that together Macbeth and she can never have a contented rule. No matter who they kill next, there is always someone who will challenge their crown. The struggle she is feeling within herself is claiming that it may be better to be the victim than the murder, because the dead do not have to live with the anxiety. Although these
...
...