Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Macbeth character profiles
- lady macbeth
- Cruel and Ruthless
- Cruel: "And fill me from crown to toe topfull/ Of direst cruelty"
- Cunning: " look like th' innocent flower / But be the serpent under 't"
- disturbed : " she is troubled with thick coming fancies"
- Ambitious
- "too full o'th' milk of human kindness"- she thinks his
goodness makes him a "coward" and stops him from
acheiving his ambitions
- She thinks no ordinary women would of planned a murder such
as this so due to this she appeals to this spirit to "unsex" her
and fill her with "direst cruelty"
- Writer uses symbolism and links lady macbeths masculinity to strength
and violence, but Shakespeare shows that women can be ruthless and
cold-hearted as men
- knows macbeths weak spot and how to minpulate him
- Theme- Macbeth is set in
a violent,
male-dominated society,
so Lady Macbeth can
only achieve her
ambitions through
Macbeth
- Writers techniques- symbolism Lady Macbeth thinks women are made weak by their maternal instincts-
she tells the spirits to "come to my woman's breats/ and take my milk for gall". wants to lose her femininity
- Women were seen normally as kinder and
weaker than men, Shakespear uses Lady
Macbeth's ambition to show this isn't always
true
- She has a softer side and says she could not have killed Duncan
herself because he reminded Lady Macbeth of her father
- Clever and quick-witted
- framed Duncans servants for the murder, this shows her slever side with her cruel and heartless side
- If lady Macbeth pretends to faint she is taking advanatge of the stereoytype women had
in the time it was wrote and how a weak women overcome by shock to hide the reality
of her creul and cold hearted nature
- Macbeth
- characteristics
- "i have no spur/ to prick the sides of my intent, but only/ Vaulting ambition
- brave; "for brave macbeth"
- guilty; "will great neptunes ocean wash this blood/ clean from my hand
- Language
- Macbeth speach reflects his state of
mind. asks loads of questions when he
feels uncertain or guilty
- "whence is that knocking?/ How is't with me, when every noise appals
me?". At the start and end of the play, his language is more certain and
confident: "stars, hide your fires", "i will not yield"
- struggles with conscience
- hears voice after killing duncan " macbeth does murder sleep"
- sees Banquos ghost at feast and almost gives himself away
- Easily influenced
- lead towards Duncans chamber by a floating dagger
- influenced by supernatural
- As the apparitions became true
macbeths belief in them became
inreased and relys on what they
said