Lady Macbeth Power Quotes

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The play, Macbeth, was written by William Shakespeare during Elizabethan times. The game is about basic riddled tasks, set up to stun one another. The main character, Macbeth, was selected as Thane of Cawdor, however, throughout the play he is seen to be abusing his power. Macbeth speaks to the three Witches, and they give him three prophecies. Relentlessly, Macbeth overthinks the prophecies and comes up with his own way to get there. He is responsible for his actions that scaled up his ambition because he took advantage of everyone and everything. Macbeth links death and power together throughout the scenes which influences him to relentlessly destroy everything, such as people of higher power. With all the murders in this tragic play, there is only one man to frame. From the …show more content…

This quote stands out because men were generally seen as above women, so it follows that Macbeth would go with his own decisions, rather than his wife’s ideas. Macbeth attempted tricking Lady Macbeth into thinking he did not want to murder Duncan; only to frame her as the main reason. This idea would have potentially worked due to the fact that people usually blame women and believe that men are better. In the play, both characters affect each other, but some more than others. The ‘now king’ pretends to experience sudden guilt; however, it is for the sake of the act. When King Duncan was discovered dead, Macbeth was shocked by the discovery. If he was truly feeling guilty, he would have confessed. Even when Lady Macbeth died, Macbeth carried out the same energy and wanted to kill more people; he made his own final decisions. This idea is shown in the quote, “Thou wast born of a woman/ But swords I smile at, weapons laugh to scorn, Brandish’d by a man that’s of a woman born” (Shakespeare, 5.7.13-15). The quote above showcases the cruel actions Macbeth did towards Siward’s son, after his wife’s

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