The Agonizing Guilt In Lady Macbeth By William Shakespeare

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After a evil deed is executed by someone, guiltiness and anguish seem to fall after. In the play, Macbeth, Lady Macbeth conveys evilness throughout the duration of the play, but portrays painful thoughts as a result of the vicious events. In this picture, Lady Macbeth’s desires have made her perform an evil action which eventually causes the agonizing guilt that will make her end her life. The image given entails the two sides of Lady Macbeth. Lady Macbeth’s has bloody hands and the look of pure dismay upon her face. Her hands are facing up, drenched in blood as if she had just committed a gory crime. Her sophisticated and royal clothing is incorporated with blood smeared everywhere, including her bare neck up to her cheek bones. Lady Macbeth …show more content…
She tells him that if she had promised him that she’d dash out the brains of her own child, she would’ve done it, ‘Have plucked my nipple from his boneless gums / And dash 'd the brains out.’ She uses the word dashed to emphasize on how she would destroy and murder her own blood and to prove that she doesn’t have an ounce of dignity within her. She would go through with the murder of her own helpless child, if she had promised what Macbeth had promised her which was to kill Duncan.
In the picture, the blood on her hands can represent the violence she has within her and the type of person she is, which is an evil one at most. The background being black is a representation of darkness. Darkness is commonly associated with immoral conduct. This is prime example of how Lady Macbeth showed cruelness from the beginning of the play.

n the middle of the play, Lady Macbeth showed a more guilty side to her. She had stepped back from her previous actions and felt as if it were time to seize the violence of her and husband. It seemed as if her guilt was causing excruciating agony and she couldn’t handle to pressure of the cruel actions of her and Macbeth’s. She proclaims,
“Nought’s had, all’s spent
Where our desire is got without

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