Lady Macbeth's Conscience in Shakespeares's Macbeth

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Lady Macbeth, a leading character in William Shakespeare’s famous tragedy Macbeth, progresses throughout the play from a savage and heartless creature to a delicate and fragile woman, having no regard for mortality.

In the beginning of the play, Lady Macbeth is both equally ambitious and evil as she urges her husband to kill King Duncan in order to fulfill the witches’ prophecies by gaining social power on the throne as king and queen. Lady Macbeth calls upon the spirits to give her emotional strength in order to help her husband go through with the murder plot, “Come, you spirits that tend on mortal thoughts! Unsex me here, and fill me from the crown to the toe top-full of direst cruelty,” (1.5.39-42). She asks the spirits to take away the tenderness, love, and pity that makes her a woman so that her conscience will not allow her to hesitate in her wicked plans. Lady Macbeth, seeming to have no conscience, takes total control in planning the plot against Duncan proving to be stronger, more ruthless, and ambitious than Macbeth. He is too honorable a man to do what he must to b...

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