Analysis Of Lady Macbeth: The Main Instigator

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Lady Macbeth: The Main Instigator In the resolution of William Shakespeare’s, The Tragedy of Macbeth, Lady Macbeth succumbs to her “self and violent hands”, and Macbeth is informed of the death of the Queen. Her suicide allows Macbeth to feel fear again, a feeling which he was previously numb to due to his confidence in the Weird Sister’s prophecies. The loss of his wife, in a way, frees him from the suffocating grasp that she has on him which forces him into committing his initial heinous act that consequentially leads to Lady Macbeth’s downfall, as well as his own. Many critics believe that the Weird Sisters are the main force causing conflict due to the prophecies and the ambiguous way they revealed them to Macbeth, while others
But contrary to those ideals, Lady Macbeth is the character that most influences the conflict that develops throughout the play because she forces Macbeth into murder, she has a historical motive, and because she embodies the characteristics of the Weird Sisters in a more sinister way.
Though the Weird Sisters do develop the tone of the play from the very beginning, and pave the path that Macbeth walks throughout the play they only inform Macbeth of the future and do nothing to influence the coming events. Early on, the Sisters divulge the prophecies too Macbeth and Banquo, but after that moment their role becomes inconsequential (Balestraci). The events that follow are not a consequence of the prophecies, because if they were truly prophecies, they would have occurred without Macbeth’s prior knowledge. The witches present Macbeth with the prophecies in a way which does not truly reveal their meaning; “All hail, Macbeth, that
Make thick my blood. / Stop up the access and passage to remorse,” (1.5.30-34) It has been argued by many critics, most notably Janet Adelman, that a link is made between The Witches and Lady Macbeth because Lady Macbeth reached out to the spirits to unsex her, which then made her vulnerable to their manipulation. If Lady Macbeth had been controlled by the Weird Sisters, like Adelman suggests, then Lady Macbeth’s role in the play would increase exponentially due to the combination of the influences that the Weird Sisters play, as well as the role that Lady Macbeth

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