Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Lady Macbeth
- Begining of the Play
- Driving force of Macbeth's evil
- Dominating
- Unnatural
- For Shakespeare's
audience at the time
- Holds the upper hand over Macbeth
- Pressure him
- Forcefull
- Shames Macbeth
- Ruthless
- Ambitious
- Selfish
- Power and Status
- Craves power
- 'Thou wouldst be great thou art
not without ambition' - LM
- Drives your actions
- Only ambition can make you great
- Things done her way
- Lust
- Guilt
- Regret
- Madness
- Macbeth continues to sieze power and control
- Lady Macbeth - decends further into madness
- 'Out damned spot out I say' - LM
- Irony
- Before she ordered and all obeyed -
Now she orders the spot out and it
stays
- Reflects the murders that cannot be reverdsed
- 'A little water clears us of the deed' - LM
- Now she is trying to wash her hands
- Of the deeds and thee guilt
- Its not working
- Concious
- Contrast from start to end of play
- Power
- 'Give me the daggers' - LM
- She orders Macbeth
- Macbeth comits murder
- Lady Macbeth still in control
- Makes the plan
- An order
- Expresses Macbeth's incapability
- She has to take care of matters
- Her husband is too weak
- Masculinity
- 'Unsex me here' - LM
- 'Make thick my blood' - LM
- willing the spirits to change her
- emotionally - typically masculine
- opposed to unstable and naieve
- Does not want to feel
- Guilt and remorse
- Prepare her for her actions
- Harness her emotion and desire
- As masculinity
- To overpower
- More of a warrior
- 'Yet do I fear thy nature; It is too full o' th' milk
of human kindness' - LM
- not masculine enough
- Fears Macbeth wont be able to carry out
the deeds neccessary to gain the power
foretold
- 'My keen knife see not the wound it makes' - LM
- Don't let herself look back at deeds
- 'keen knife' shows she wants to comit the murder
- Not suffer from the emotion after
- It is alsso said like an order
- Showing her control and power