In her conversations with Ross and with her son, of what does Lady Macduff accuse her husband? How is Lady Macduff similar to Lady Macbeth? How is she different?
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Anonymous
said...
Lady Macduff accuses her husband of being a traitor to the king. She seems to be disappointed. She also seems a lot like Lady Macbeth, who is very controling of distinct situations and moments.
Lady Macduff says that her husband does not love them because what kind of man leaves his wife and children alone feeling unsafe. "For the poor wren,/The most diminutive of birds,will fight,/her young ones in her nest, against the owl./All is the fear and nothing is the love,/ As little is the wisdom, where the flight/So runs against all reason." 9-14 IV.ii. Lady Macduff is very like Lady Macbeth because both of them go crazy when situations appear. They expect a lot from their husbands and in other words they want the perfect husband that fulfills their every needs.
Lady Macduff believes that her husband is really a traitor and no longer cares for her nor his child, because he left them and fled to England, leaving them with problem and danger. Lady Macbeth and Lady Macduff has the similarity of being the wife of a powerful men, and expects more as a reflection of their position. The difference between them are that Lady Macbeth pressures her husband in doing the deed she would never will able to do which makes her appear as the evil in this book. In contrast, Lady Macduff is weak and could not do anything when her husband fled to England and also could not protect her child from the killer. When she gets killed by the killer, she is drawn more as a victim than Lady Macbeth would do, since she has not really done something evil like Lady Macbeth.
3 comments:
Lady Macduff accuses her husband of being a traitor to the king. She seems to be disappointed. She also seems a lot like Lady Macbeth, who is very controling of distinct situations and moments.
Lady Macduff says that her husband does not love them because what kind of man leaves his wife and children alone feeling unsafe. "For the poor wren,/The most diminutive of birds,will fight,/her young ones in her nest, against the owl./All is the fear and nothing is the love,/ As little is the wisdom, where the flight/So runs against all reason." 9-14 IV.ii.
Lady Macduff is very like Lady Macbeth because both of them go crazy when situations appear. They expect a lot from their husbands and in other words they want the perfect husband that fulfills their every needs.
Lady Macduff believes that her husband is really a traitor and no longer cares for her nor his child, because he left them and fled to England, leaving them with problem and danger. Lady Macbeth and Lady Macduff has the similarity of being the wife of a powerful men, and expects more as a reflection of their position. The difference between them are that Lady Macbeth pressures her husband in doing the deed she would never will able to do which makes her appear as the evil in this book. In contrast, Lady Macduff is weak and could not do anything when her husband fled to England and also could not protect her child from the killer. When she gets killed by the killer, she is drawn more as a victim than Lady Macbeth would do, since she has not really done something evil like Lady Macbeth.
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