Lady Macbeth Sane In The Mind Analysis

1657 Words4 Pages

To be mad is to not be sane in the mind. Throughout his life, Shakespeare composed many short stories, poems, and novels. He formed characters whose personalities were each different in their own way. Shakespeare wrote of loony, dark-minded women, love-struck men, and so much more. In Macbeth, he wrote of a woman by the name of Lady Macbeth; through her unconscious statements and activities it is revealed how the murder of King Duncan truly affected her psychological condition. Through all his works it is seen Shakespeare was a talented artist who used his intellect and God-given abilities to design beautiful masterpieces of literary art. In 1606, he wrote Macbeth, or The Scottish Play. Each character he created was a true representation of …show more content…

Coriat believed her to have a disease of the mind known as somnambulism. Coriat wrote of her thoughts on Lady Macbeth’s condition and said, “She is not the victim of a blind fate or destiny or punished by a moral law, but affected by a mental disease,” (“The Psychoanalysis of Lady Macbeth” shakespeare-online.com). She told of how Lady Macbeth did not have her eyes closed as she slept as one normally would, but how she had her eyes were open as if she were awake; this series of events is part of what led Coriat to diagnose Lady Macbeth with somnambulism (“The Psychoanalysis of Lady Macbeth” shakespeare-online.com). Coriat’s analysis and diagnosis of somnambulism proved Lady Macbeth to not be insane, but to truly be affected by a disease of the mind which could not be …show more content…

She told of how the emotions and thoughts which Lady Macbeth held in were shown to have been the culprits behind the mental disease (“The Psychoanalysis of Lady Macbeth” shakespeare-online.com). Coriat described somnambulism as being “not sleep, but an abnormal mental state, distinct from the ordinary mental state of the subject,” (“The Psychoanalysis of Lady Macbeth” shakespeare-online.com). The thoughts and emotions suppressed by Lady Macbeth are the obvious reasons she suffered this disease, as talked about by Coriat. Lady Macbeth was, to the knowledge of the reader, sane in the mind until she and Macbeth committed the murder of Duncan. There was no evidence within Macbeth that she might have been mentally deranged before Duncan’s

Open Document