Wednesday, October 24, 2012

Can Macbeth's state of mind in Macbeth be compared to Brutus in Julius Caesar? Is Lady Macbeth really a woman with all masculine characteristics?

Macbeth and Brutus, though both are guilty of regicide,
have more differences than similarities. Macbeth is motivated by the prophecies of the
witches and his own personal ambition. He essentially goes a on killing spree, becoming
a cold tyrant willing to sacrifice anyone for his own pursuit of power. Brutus is
motivated by doing what is best Rome, and tries his best to avoid looking like
cold-hearted murders by not killing Antony (though this decision proves to be foolish
and leads to his death).


Both tragic heroes are somewhat
manipulated into their respective situations though, Brutus by Cassius and Macbeth by
Lady Macbeth. Both also show signs of a guilty conscious by seeing ghosts of people they
have murdered (Julius Caesar and Banquo), so they are similar in those
ways.


As for Lady Macbeth, she prays to the gods to make
her have the harshness of a man, and to take away her womanly emotions, in order to do
what she believes her husband cannot do. In the beginning of the play, she is cold and
harsh, and is described as more manly than feminine. However, as Macbeth gets more and
more driven by power, Lady Macbeth succumbs more and more to her womanly emotions,
eventually breaking under the guilt and emotional burden and taking her own
life.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Calculate tan(x-y), if sin x=1/2 and sin y=1/3. 0

We'll write the formula of the tangent of difference of 2 angles. tan (x-y) = (tan x - tan y)/(1 + tan x*tan y) ...