Lady Macbeth's 'Unsex Me Here'

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William Shakespeare’s plays are full of fools, heroes, and lovers, but some of his most memorable characters are the dark figures who scheme and hide in the shadows. One such character is Lady Macbeth, without whom the entire plot of the Macbeth tragedy would likely never be set in motion. Along with her claiming the throne of being one of Shakespeare’s most notable female characters, the queen of “The Scottish Play” also gives one of the most memorable speeches assigned to Shakespeare’s female characters. Lady Macbeth’s “Unsex me here” soliloquy, given in Act I, Scene V, has been debated and analyzed for over three centuries, and is arguably one of the most important and influential speeches given in the entire play. Not only does this soliloquy introduce foreshadow and introduce supernatural elements which set the mood for the play, but the language used by Lady Macbeth clearly presents the themes of ambition, violence, and masculinity. By requesting that the spirits change Lady Macbeth from a mere mortal to something almost unnatural, the …show more content…

Lady Macbeth calls on all sorts of spirits to assist her in her murderous plan, yet later on with chastise Macbeth for being too feminine and weak to be called a man, or carry out the murder. This speech she gives establishes her as the steel behind her husband, and the master mind behind the plan, thus giving her a rank among men although she is a female. It is for reasons of masculinity (which is equal to power in the play) that Lady Macbeth implores the spirits “stop th’access and passage to remorse” (1.5.52), and that she wishes not to feature her feminine characteristics. The violence which the diction implies also denotes the violence with which the to-be queen believes and feels what she must do and achieve. However, the violence which comes from this soliloquy quickly escalates and proliferates, and the play becomes an absolute

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