If I find out someone has printed this for to show as their own work, I'll kill ya!
'Fiend-like Queen'. Is this How You Think The Audience Views Lady Macbeth?
Malcolm,
who later becomes the King of Scotland, used the term 'Fiend-like
Queen'.
Malcolm hated Lady Macbeth's husband, Macbeth, because he
was a merciless killer, and everyone knew it. However, to call his
wife 'fiend-like' may seem to be rather harsh to the other Thanes and
Lords as Lady Macbeth behaved as sweetly and graciously in front of
them. We (the audience) that she may not have not are entirely
'fiend-like'.
But, as an audience of the 21st century we would see
her differently as a 17the century audience would.
To them, she
would be akin to the witches and would be completely evil. To us we
would see a complicated woman, and we will be watching her go from a
proud and ambitious lady to a Queen who commits suicide.
Lady
Macbeth is portrayed as a manipulating and cunning woman, but it
could be argued that she was nonetheless a loyal and caring wife to
Macbeth.
When it came to planning Duncan's murder, she persuaded,
encouraged and even bullied Macbeth into doing the act, not just for
her own benefit, but because she truly believes that he was destined
to become the King of Scotland, and she decided that nothing would
stand in the way of his destiny, as she says here:
'
"Glamis thou art, and Cawdor, and shalt be
What thou art
promised" ' -Lady Macbeth, 1.5, lines 14-15
Macbeth
and Lady Macbeth also had a very good relationship together, he calls
her "My dearest love" when he fist sees her in the play,
which indicates a closeness between the two.
However, her bad
points centers on her relentless ambition and ruthlessness; once she
wants something nothing will stop her from getting it. She plans the
event carefully but she does not really plan the after effects.
With
this attitude, it that she is quite uncaring, it seems, for other
people's problems, and indeed their lives in the face of the
aforementioned success, seen here:
'
"His two chamberlains
Will I with wine and wassail so
convince,
That memory, the warder of the brain" ' -Lady
Macbeth, 1.7, Lines 63-65
In
the 17th century, the audience may have been afraid to Lady Macbeth,
because she seemed similar to the witches. In the 17th century
witches were considered one of the ultimate evils, and the witches in
the play are like that, evil and hideous. They are persuasive and
powerful, like Lady Macbeth, except as you can see, she is even more
aggressive; "Was the hope drunk Wherein you dressed
yourself?"
The witches are evil and look ugly, Lady Macbeth
is similar but not ugly, and this could be seen as a view of deceit
because she acts sweet but is really the opposite, but she does not
look evil, and here we can see Lady Macbeth telling husband how to
act in front of the others, like herself:
'
"Bear welcome in your eye
Your had, your tongue: look like
th'innocent flower,
But be the serpent under't" ' - Lady
Macbeth, 1.5 Lines 63-65
In
the medieval times that Macbeth is set in, Lady Macbeth does not fit
in. In those times women followed their husbands, and let them make
all of the major decisions. Lady Macbeth and her husband treat each
other like equals, but when it comes to convincing Macbeth to kill
Duncan, his king and kinsman, it is she who is the aggressor.
Throughout most of the play, she acts as though she is the stronger
of the two, she still supports Macbeth and tells him to simply
'Toughen up', while hiding her own worries.
By Act 3 Lady Macbeth
is the Queen of Scotland, she's completed her dream of success,
however not everything has turned out how she planned. Her husband
Macbeth is becoming paranoid with Banquo, who suspects Macbeth was
involved with Duncan's murder. Macbeth decides to kill Banquo without
telling Lady Macbeth, only saying to her "Be innocent of the
knowledge, my dearest chuck" A sign that they may be drifting
apart, because prior to the murder, they probably shared secrets and
the evidence was there that they were close. When Macbeth sees the
apparition of Banquo and panickes, Lady Macbeth only thinks that he
is crumbling over Duncan's death. She tells him to be calm and sleep
it through, but she might of felt slightly panicked by now, her
husband seems to be crumbling before her eyes, when she is starting
to have doubts herself.
I do not think that Lady Macbeth expected
her husband to change so much after Duncan's death, nor her own
budding regret, as seen in this quotation:
"Where
desire is got without content;
'Tis safer to be that which we
destroy
Than by destruction dwell in doubtful joy"
-Lady
Macbeth, Act 3.2, Lines 5-7
In
Act 5 Scene 1 Lady Macbeth is seen sleepwalking by the doctor and
gentlewoman, who has seen her sleepwalk before.
We see Lady
Macbeth speaking in an unusual way, using the words "The Thane
of Fife; where is she now?" and how she has dirty hands, she
must act normally, however she feels so much guilt. Before she always
speaks clearly and sensibly in prose, but what she is saying in
poetic verse does not seem clear to the doctor and gentlewoman, but
she is speaking of the murder of Duncan, and how events have gone
wrong since then, throughout this entire time, she makes hand motions
which show she is washing her hands, which mirrors her thoughts that
her hands will never be clean, and that her mind may slowly be
starting to unravel, because of her guilt.
This scene shows a true
insight into what Lady Macbeth is truly thinking. Before this scene
we thought that she was rather ruthless and heartless, but we now see
she regrets her actions, but puts on a brave face. Her hand washing
also shows she thinks the blood is on her hands, and she can never be
pure again. Earlier she had said to Macbeth "Go get some water,
and wash this filthy witness from your hand" and yet in this
sleepwalking scene, she contradicts herself by saying "Here's
the smell of blood still: all the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten
this little hand"
In the beginning of the play Lady Macbeth
starts as a very strong and assertive woman, who's ambitions lead to
King Duncan's murder due to her belief that her husband was destined
to be the King, but then regresses to a weakening woman. Malcolm was
somewhat right to call her 'fiend-like', because of her ruthlessness
lead to Duncan's murder, and from then on, the play shows the
'downfall of Scotland' because of the combined actions of her and the
witches. However, to call her 'fiend-like' would lead us to think she
had a very cruel nature, but she was very loyal and caring to her
husband, she may have pushed to kill Duncan, but she did because of
her belief in his destiny.
In conclusion, I think that Lady
Macbeth is a woman with many layers, we can see from Act 3 her
confident and dominant layers slowly starting to peel away, because
she can see that things are changing now, especially her relationship
with her husband. Somehow her actions had cause Macbeth to slowly
change to the tyrant King we see at the end of the play Towards the
end of the play, when Macbeth has received news of her suicide, you
can see that the two are so apart, compared to their earlier days
with sweet words of "My dearest love" Macbeth does not
appear to show any remorse, only saying ;
"She should of died hereafter; There would have been a time for such a word"
