In a murder case it may be possible for someone else to be at fault besides the murderer. In the play “Macbeth” written by William Shakespeare, there are three witches that make prophecies to a man named Macbeth. These foretellings include Macbeth being titled as Thane of Glamis, Thane of Cawdor, and King of Scottland. After two of these fortunes come true he is very eager to make the third one come true and he is willing to go to extreme length to acquire this title. His wife, Lady Macbeth, may be even more ambitious to gain the title of queen. The King ends up getting murdered, but it is debatable who is truly at fault. Lady Macbeth is wanted the status of queen so much that she didn't want anything to get in her way, she also manipulated …show more content…
This then caused her to not let anything get in her way of accomplishing this goal of hers. Shakespeare demonstrates this idea by writing “Hie thee hither, That I may pour my spirits in thine ear And chastise with the valor of my tongue All that impedes thee from the golden round” (Act 1, Scene 7). By saying this, he makes it clear that Lady Macbeth was scared that her husband would not be able to have to gets to do what it takes to help her achieve the role of queen so she is going to try to convince him to do some extreme things to make the prophecy come true. It can be seen that the reason behind Macbeth carrying out the murder are not his reasosns but instead the reasons that Lady Macbeth tells him. Another way that Shakespeare reveals Lady Macbeth’s greed is by giving her the dialogue “Great Glamis, worthy Cawdor, Greater than both, by the all-hail hereafter, Thy letters have transported me beyond This ignorant present, and I feel now The future in the instant.” (Act 1, Scene 5). This statement that Lady Macbeth says to macbeth helps support the idea that after reading the letter she was very excited about the idea of becoming queen. She admits that she is eager for the day to come when she gets crowned. Based on all of this evidence it is clear that Lady Macbeth is super ambitious about receiving this high ranking title of queen and it can be questioned …show more content…
Some may argue that since he was the one that physically murdered King Duncan he is the one that is responsible. Once it was time to conduct the murder, Macbeth tried backing out because he knew it was the right thing to do and he could not bring himself to do something so bad to someone who had done so much for him. This can be proven when Mabeth expresses “I have no spur To prick the sides of my intent, but only Vaulting ambition, which o'erleaps itself And falls on th' other.” (Act 1, Scene 7). By making it evident that he does not want to move forward with the murder it can be seen that he does not want to let his ambition to become king over take him and make him do unethical things. Macbeth believes that ambition is not a good reason to follow through with something so bad. Lady Mcbeth insults her husband by stating “What beast was’t, then, That made you break this enterprise to me? When you durst do it, then you were a man; And to be more than what you were, you would Be so much more the man”( Act 1, Scene 7). This can clearly show that Lady Macbeth was more determined to follow the plan and went as far as insulting the person she loved to be able to accomplish the goal. She is evidently using these insults to get into Macbeths head so that he will tey to prove her wrong and commit the murder. Although Macbeth is the one who plunged the dagger into King Duncan, Lady Macbeth encouraged
Here are the facts: we have my defendant Macbeth who has been charged with the murders of King Duncan, Banquo, and Macduff’s wife and children. There is no denying that these are heinous crimes, but this is not solely Macbeth’s fault. He was indeed duped the three witches he came across. These crimes did not come from Macbeth, but instead the witches. Although they may have not been the ones who physically committed the crimes, they are most definitely to blame.
Who would be considered more responsible on the murder of Duncan, the person who killed him or the person who encouraged the killer to do it? Both are considered responsible, however one is more guilty than the other. Your honor I have to prove that Lady Macbeth was involved in the death of Duncan. She encouraged my client, Macbeth, to kill Duncan by saying “Art thou afeard As thou art desire?”
This is her wicked tacted to manipulate Macbeth into going ahead with the killing. Lady Macbeth is also directly a cause for Macbeth’s actions . She forms the details of the plan to kill duncan , and orders him throughout the play, such as “give me the daggers” and “ leave all the rest to me” , both very demanding. It appears to me that without lady Macbeth’s “direst cruelty” Macbeth would not have had the willpower to carry out the task . Perhaps he is merely a tool, manipulated by Lady Macbeth's to achieve her goal to be queen.
Lady Macbeth is culpable for the tragic events because she attacks Macbeth’s masculinity to coerce him to kill King Duncan. After receiving the witches’ prophecies, Macbeth states, “If chance will have me king, why, chance may/crown me/ Without my stir” (1.4.157-159). Macbeth decides that he will allow fate to crown him king. Therefore, he will not try to obtain the crown through his own actions. Subsequently, Lady Macbeth states,
Macbeth can be seen as legally responsible for the murder, as it has been proven that possessed both the actus reus and mens rea of the crime. Despite Macbeth’s guilt being proven, Lady Macbeth and the Witches were not innocent either. Had they not interfered, Macbeth would never have thought of murdering the King Duncan. After Macbeth committed the murder, he was in such a distraught state that he forgot to place the knife on the guards. Macbeth’s disturbed state is such a stark contrast from how he was originally described in Act 1, Scene 2, “For brave Macbeth (well he deserves that name) disdaining fortune, with his brandish’d steel, which smok’d with bloody execution,” (Shakespeare, Act 1, Scene 2).
After she read the letter that her husband addressed to her she said, "Hurry home so I can twist your thinking with my sharp words toward the obstacles that stand in the way of your crowning, a rise to greatness that destiny and the witches have promised" (I.V.24-29). She had a sneaky plan to murder King Duncan. Lady Macbeth didn’t see a problem or anything wrong with killing King Duncan; she only saw it as a way to gain more power and a way to take over the throne. Lady Macbeth called upon the evil supernatural spirits to help get her in the frame of mind to peer pressure Macbeth into doing what she wants and says. She said, "Come, you spirits that tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here, and fill me from the crown to the toe topful of direst cruelty. "
Throughout the scene, Macbeth is subjected to mockery, guilt-tripping, and dishonor for hesitating to kill the king. She brilliantly structures her arguments to focus on her husband, portraying her cause to be in his best interest. This succeeds, for Lady Macbeth knows her husband is an egocentric and, in his eyes, a valiant man. In the end, Macbeth decides to go through with the plan, but becomes more passionate about it than before. Lady Macbeth manipulated him into solidly committing to it.
After hearing and believing what the witches had to say, Lady Macbeth tries to convince Macbeth to kill king Duncan. However at first, Lady Macbeth tries to make Macbeth the king by handling the situation herself. She says to her husband,”This night’s great business into my dispatch, Which shall to all our nights and days to come Give solely sovereign sway and masterdom” (1.5.. What Lady Macbeth is saying to her husband is that she will take of the plans regarding Duncan, and then says that after that night, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth will be as happy as
In the play Macbeth there was a lot of stuff that went on that could keep the reader interested. One of these things are all of the murders in the play. With all these murders happening, there has to be someone to blame. In the play Lady Macbeth is to blame for the murders because she called evil upon herself, influenced Macbeth to be a murder, and she wanted power.
After the hallucination that Macbeth had Duncan was found dead. Lady Macbeth was there to wash her husband's hands clean and rushed him into his room so they were both unseen. Lady Macbeth may have convinced and given Macbeth more reason to kill his cousin earlier in the act. Lady Macbeth could have made Macbeth insane which makes her the murderer as she was the mind behind the plan. She constantly told him how proud of him she was for getting over his fear of supposedly killing his cousin.
(Shakespeare i, vii). Macbeth is having second thought about killing King Duncan, however Lady Macbeth refused to allow him to pass up the opportunity to become king. She asked these rhetorical questions in order to make him feel ashamed of himself for not acting on his desires. Lady Macbeth's main intentions are to make the situation sount elegant so Macbeth feels comfortable killing him. She tries to reason logically with him, pointing out that he wanted to kill the king, but now when he has the opportunity too, he suddenly doesn't want to.
This “future queen” sees the life she could have flash before her eyes and obviously Macbeth was hesitant because King Duncan was a honest man and Macbeth was a “servant” to him and he was family to Macbeth so he really didn’t want to go through with it. This fueled Lady Macbeth to conjure the death of King Duncan as well as covering it up. Lady Macbeth in Act 1, asked the spirits if they could “unsex” her so that she could ultimately be capable to go through with the killing. She felt like her husband (Macbeth) could not do her dirty work that she could wish that she could do herself.
He hath honored me of late, and I have bought golden opinions from all sorts of people, which would be worn now in their newest gloss, not cast aside so soon” (Shakespeare 1.7.31-35). Lady Macbeth does not seem to care about Macbeth’s heartly desires. Lady Macbeth insisted on making Macbeth king and herself queen. She convinces Macbeth to kill King Duncan. She does this by questioning Macbeth’s manhood, “It is too full o’ th’ milk of human kindness to catch the nearest way” (Shakespeare 1.5.15-16).
Lady Macbeth persuades and manipulates Macbeth by pointing out his insecurities successfully and pressuring him into murdering the king. Along with this, Lady Macbeth also questions Macbeth’s manhood and masculinity when he does not want to carry out the plan when she says “When you durst do it, then you were a man;//And to be more than what you were, you would//Be so much more the man” (Shakespeare 1.7.49-51). By saying these things, Lady Macbeth persuades her husband to believe that murdering the king will be his redemption from being a
Macbeth chose to listen and accept the prophecy as truth even though he had no proof. Although the witches influence Macbeth they did not suggest to Macbeth to kill the king, he got that idea from his selfish thoughts. After the witches visit Macbeth he goes to his wife about his thoughts of killing the king. Lady Macbeth encourages murder because that’s the only way she thinks Macbeth can become king.