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Lady Macbeth Figurative Language

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Lady Macbeth Figurative Language
Lady Macbeth was brought into the play reading the letter from her husband, Macbeth. I began to think, as we started the play, that Lady Macbeth was linked to one of the weird sisters. When she read the letter out loud, she said it in a very firm tone of voice. I was confused on why she was like this since her husband was given the opportunity to become the Thane of Cawdor. Later on in the scene, she begins to summon up spirits to give her the power to go on with her plan to kill Duncan. I think the reason she did this was because of her mentality being firm to get what she wanted, to gain power. This obviously led to bad consequences in the future for her and her husband. Her ambition to have power was strongly influenced in the play and in her role as Lady Macbeth. …show more content…
49-52). When I first read this line, I was confused on the words she used like night and knife. I had explored these words more since she says them throughout the course of the play. These words were used by the witches so it shows that they are influencing her over time. Earlier in the play, she seems to be the stronger and more ruthless of the two, as she urges her husband to kill Duncan and seize the crown because she is the desperate one to be on the

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