To what extent do you feel sympathy for Lady Macbeth and for Curley’s wife?

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Would one be more sympathetic to a woman who influences her husband to kill her king, who then becomes mentally ill and dies from the melancholy and phrenic condition brought on by guilt from her actions or would one be more sympathetic to a woman that just endeavours finding love but then is judged a salacious bitch? Do Shakespeare and Steinbeck simply just inform woman of their eras that women shouldn’t endeavour what these too endeavoured as it will lead to their downfall and they made the audience sympathetic towards them just for tradition to carry on and for the audience not to copy them? This essay will explore how we as an audience feel sympathy for Lady Macbeth and Curley’s wife throughout the play and novella, and how this feeling changes as we examine Lady Macbeth and Curley’s wife.
Lady Macbeth is firstly presented in the play when she receives a letter from her husband expounding that the weird sisters have prognosticated his future as king. When Lady Macbeth discovers that King Duncan will be staying as a guest overnight in their castle, she plans a regicide to secure Macbeth's place on the throne. Nevertheless, Macbeth being "too full o' the milk of human kindness" seems to be a barrier for Lady Macbeth to the audience, but Lady Macbeth seemed to understand how to plan the murder and convinces her husband Macbeth by denigrating his manhood. If her husband's going to be the powerful figure she wants him to be, Lady Macbeth's got to take things into her own hands. She is conveyed as a zealous, self-assured and ascendant character. In her first soliloquy in Act 1, scene 5, Lady Macbeth is tenacious to procure the fate of Macbeth in an immoral manner. Albeit the prophesies prognosticated by the Weird Sisters were that ...

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..."yes ma'am". She didn't make any threats directly though she gave him the general conception if he argued any more he could get lynched. "Well, you keep your place then, Nigger. I could get you strung up on a tree so easy it ain't even funny." shows how Curley’s wife utilized her femininity as an exculpation to threaten Crooks and she has to do all her violence by proxy —and in the world of this novel that makes her impotent and despicable. This might make the audience feel somehow sympathetic to Curley’s wife when they realise that she has to do all her violence by proxy and makes her impuissant and despicable, but they will not feel sympathy to her at all when she threatens an isolated ‘nigger’ just to stop her isolation, instead of taking other paths, such as: verbalizing with him, playing cards or something like that, but no, instead she decides to threaten him.

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