Temptation Cradle: Lady Macbeth

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Acute award-winning novelist J.K. Rowling once said, “Power was my weakness and my temptation.” Temptation is something everyone encounters at least once in their lives. Indubitably, most people deal with it every day. The hard part about coping with temptation is to decide whether to yield or succumb to this perpetual temptation. Determining what to do with temptation is something that sets people apart from having a fragile, or having a tenacious personality. Shakespeare’s Macbeth fully delves into and reiterates all aspects of temptation throughout the entirety of this timeless play. In this play, Lady Macbeth is plagued with temptation early on. Her choice to give in to this temptation makes her extremely vital. Lady Macbeth is important in Macbeth because she is manipulative, extreme, and determined.
One reason why Lady Macbeth is important in Macbeth is because she is manipulative. Lady Macbeth has devised an untenable plan of murder that will put her on a fast track to royalty by making her husband the king. When Macbeth gets home from war, Lady Macbeth, his wife, tells him about her plan of murdering the current king, Duncan. At first, Macbeth seemingly agrees with his wife, but as can be seen in act one, scene one, line thirty-four, “We will proceed no farther in this business”, Macbeth clearly turns the plan down. Lady Macbeth thinks her acrimonious way is the only way to become royalty. She begins manipulating Macbeth back into the plan, and even goes as far as to question her husband’s manhood. Lines forty-seven through forty-nine prove this, “and live in thine own esteem letting ‘I dare not’ wait upon ‘I would’ like a poor cat in the adage.” Macbeth then absolutely feels like he must go through with the plan simply ...

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... she is manipulative, extreme, and determined, Lady Macbeth is important in Macbeth. She succumbs to temptation, which proves that she has a weak personality, and sends her spiraling out of control. Lady Macbeth is the most complete character in this play and, and that is aided by temptation. At first readers abhor her, but in the end her benign personality makes the readers feel sorry for her, even though she was the one who decided to give in to the temptation that was placed in front of her. This play is one of Shakespeare’s greatest examples of temptation and the outcomes of it. Shakespeare fully understood that everyone deals with temptation quite often. It is important that mankind also understands temptation and the consequences and/or benefits. This understanding can help make good decisions and help provide a positive outcome in life, rather than negative.

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