Monday, February 11, 2019

Shakespeare’s Lady Macbeth: Pure Evil? Essay -- Shakespeares Lady Mac

Next to Macbeth himself, Lady Macbeth is the penultimate person in Shakespeares play, Macbeth. And though she does not survive to the end, her influence on Macbeth lasts throughout the play. She is the around influential person in Macbeths downfall, next to the witches. However, her relationship with him goes far deeper accordingly that of the witches. It is my belief that the witches act only as a trigger to seize on the events in the play, and that Lady Macbeth herself was the driving force behind Macbeths actions. It is she who he contacts when he meets the witches, and immediately trusts her with the prophecy he is given. The relationship between Macbeth and his wife is prevailing to the understanding of a major theme of this play. At first it would be to be an equal partnership. However, I believe Lady Macbeth was the dominant of the devil character she could have persuaded Macbeth to do anything if she so wished. And though she does not openly exercise her power over hi m in public, in private she often uses humiliation and emotional bribery to manipulate Macbeth to execute her will. The first word picture in which we see Lady Macbeth is Act 1 Scene 5, in the first half of which she is reading the letter sent by Macbeth close his meeting with the witches, and about half way through Macbeth, himself enters, having caught up with the courier who delivered the letter. Immediately we see the nature of her relationship with Macbeth, and have a unbendable sense of her character. The first thing that you notice of course, is that Lady Macbeth is reading a letter that must have been written mere hours after the events contained happened. It is a letter from Macbeth, containing potentially treasonous information about his meeting with the... ...Barbara Mowat and capital of Minnesota Warstine. raw(a) York Washington Press, 1992.Works ConsultedBradley A. C. Shakespearean Tragedy 1912 pp. 468-9 Curry, Walter. Shakespeare s philosophic Patterns. capital of the United Kingdom Mass Peter Smith, 1968. Epstein, Norrie. The Friendly Shakepeare, New York, Viking Publishing, 1993. Harbage, Alfred, Macbeth, Middlesex England, Penguin Publishing, 1956. Magill, Masterplots- Volume 6, New Jersey, Salem Press, 1949. Paul, Henry N. The Royal Play of Macbeth 1950 pp. 213-17 Schlegel, August Wilhelm. Criticism on Shakespeare s Tragedies . A Course of Lectures on Dramatic Art and Literature. London AMS Press, Inc., 1965. Steevens, George. Shakespeare, The Critical Heritage. Vol. 6. London Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1981. Wills, Gary. Lady Macbeth and Evil. Oxford Oxford University Press, 1998.

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