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Lady Macbeth Danger Of Ambition

Decent Essays

The play ‘Macbeth’ established by William Shakespeare, exhibits the act of ambition and the danger that also accompanies it. Shakespeare specifically utilises this through the characters of Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, and how ambition accounts for a majority of the mishaps that occur throughout the course of the play. During the beginning acts of the play, Macbeth is declared as a good-willed man who only inflicts righteousness upon others. However, as soon as the possibility of utmost power is said to be crowned in his name, Lady Macbeth and Macbeth are filled with only deceit in order to claim success. Whilst the couple looks as though they are in control of their ambition and their actions, danger is however always seeping through. It does …show more content…

However, Lady Macbeth’s ambition is clearly more apparent, whereas great doubts still linger within Macbeth. Alas, Lady Macbeth’s overpowering ambition results in the influence of Macbeth’s action to kill Duncan. Immediately after this event, Macbeth is brooded with a perpetual strain that cleaves to his every move as he declares, ‘What hands are here? Ha: they pluck out mine eyes, will all great Neptune’s oceans wash this blood clean from my hand? No: this my hand will rather the multitudinous seas incarnadine’. This positions the reader to feel as though ambition is a quality which is hard to keep aligned, and is a quality that too easily evokes distress. Not only does Shakespeare conclude the danger of their ambition here, only more trouble prolongs. Banquo develops a realisation that Macbeth was the one to murder Duncan, and Macbeth’s ambition only rises and silhouettes an aspiration to kill Banquo. Meanwhile, Lady Macbeth reveals that they have never gained anything from their ambition to behold sovereignty as she declares, ‘Where our desire is got without content, ‘tis safer to be that which we destroy than by destruction dwell in doubtful joy’. This positions the reader to realise that in every moment of ‘success’ inflicted from the ambition portrayed by both of these characters, it is as though Shakespeare chastises them due to their selfish approach to the

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