Wednesday, November 11, 2015

Please write a detailed description of why Lady Macbeth is a fiend-like queen in Macbeth?

You are asking if Lady Macbeth is a fiend-like person in Shakespeare's Macbeth.  She certainly isn't literally a fiend, nor is she a fourth witch, but I suppose you could make an argument that she is fiend-like.


She believes in what she calls "spirits" and asks them for help.  In Act 1.5, she asks them, in a stern and serious manner, to "unsex" her--make her more like a man (ruthless, aggressive).  She asks them to fill her with "direst cruelty."  She asks them to turn her mother's milk to poison.


Later, trying to manipulate and convince Macbeth that the two of them should continue with plans to assassinate Duncan, she says that if she had promised to do something like Macbeth promised to kill Duncan (which he didn't really do, by the way), rather than go back on her word she would pluck her child from her breast while he was eating and "dashed the brains out" (Act 1.7).  


Of course, an answer to your question partially depends on your definition of "fiend."  But if you define fiend in a traditional or popular way, then yes you could argue that Lady Macbeth is much like a fiend.

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