The Crazy Tales of men and women
The theme of destructive love within relationships in ShakeSpeare’s Macbeth and Bronte’s Wuthering Heights are presented through sexism, jealousy,and betrayal. Many events took place in these two story crazy,sad and evil things. Times have changed now how women are trying to get control of the relationship but can't. In ShakeSpeare's,time it was easy for women to gain control of the relationship well at least for lady Macbeth it was. In shakespeare's story lady Macbeth in the beginning she had a lot of control and talked to him any kind of way. Lady Macbeth told Macbeth he “live a coward” (ShakeSpeare's,1.7,43) saying he is a coward and scared. In today's times women would be very scared of Lady Macbeth
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But in the book Wuthering Heights things were different. Wuthering Heights you can tell the man is in control.Heathcliff is a very mean person he loves his wife very much he just very mean to her. He loves his wife, but he really wants to be with Catherine. By Heathcliff says “come,come”(Bronte,1,6) he is directing someone. You can tell he is kinda controlling and try’s to tell people what to do. Heathcliff is the man Lady Macbeth wants Macbeth to be but don't gets she get the total opposite. Heathcliff is abusive you can tell by how he talks to people and act towards them. Both men will sacrifice a lot of the women they love.
Macbeth sacrifice for Lady Macbeth allot he sacrifice his love life, his conscience, his mind and all. Macbeth said “ To know my deed ‘twere best not know myself” (shakespeare,2.2,71). He saying that he knows what he have done its best for him to forget what happen what he did. Macbeth then learns he is no longer in control of his life Lady Macbeth is taking over it. Macbeth is very weak, he needs to regain his control so that he can show her who is the boss and in charge.
After Catherine's death you see a new and worst Heathcliff, he get’s more violent. Heathcliff gets so crazy to the point he wants Catherine to haunt him. He wishes he would've killed her himself. Catherine is dying hurt Heathcliff more than it did Edgar and her and Edgar were married . Heathcliff sacrifices his sanity. But even though he does that he stay has a very
After Catherine died, Heathcliff beseeched her to stay with him and haunt him. He is a self-centered human being, and desires Catherine to be with him even after death. Edgar on the other hand didn't beg for Catherine to haunt him, for he was looking forward to their time together in the afterlife. This proves Heathcliff’s selfishness to needing Catherine with him, and also confirms the fact that Edgar is the one that would unconditionally love Catherine forever. Heathcliff selfishly only wanted Catherine for himself, he visited Catherine’s coffin and removed the blond lock of hair which belongs to Edgar and threw it to the floor, then taking his own and placing it in.
Heathcliff resents her scorn. He desires to regain her approval. He attempts to be “decent” and “good” for her sake (Brontë 40). However, his attempt to be decent fails miserably. He resents the attentions that Catherine gives to Edgar. Catherine would rather wear a “silly frock” and have dinner with “silly friends” than ramble about the moors with him (Brontë 50). Heathcliff keeps track of the evenings Catherine spends with Edgar and those that she spends with him. He desperately wants to be with Catherine. When Catherine announces to Nelly her engagement to Edgar, Heathcliff eavesdrops, but leaves the room when he “heard Catherine say it would degrade her to marry him” (Brontë 59). Catherine has spurned his love, choosing Edgar over him. Heathcliff cannot bear this rejection. The love he possesses for her transcends romantic and filial love (Mitchell 124). He feels that he is one with her (Mitchell 123).
Heathcliff is abused; his only source of love is his dearest Catherine, yet even that love cannot thrive in Heathcliff’s environment. The problem is not that his love is unrequited, but rather that Catherine believes she would fall to ruin if she were to be with Heathcliff “It would degrade me to marry Heathcliff now; so he shall never know how I love him---because he's more
One of the most dramatic scenes in the book is the death of Catherine. The first signs of her failing health physically and mentally come when she locks herself up in her room after Heathcliff and Edgar's fight. She fasts herself into a delirium, pulling out pillow stuffing and seeing faces in the mirror. Unlike ordinary death, which comes quick and painlessly, Catherine's slowly wastes her away into a ghost. About seven months later, she dies at childbirth, but returning to haunt Heathcliff. The main cause for Catherine's death is not childbirth, although it may have been the final contributor. Ironically, because of the spiritual link between Heathcliff and her, it is their separation that killed her. Brontë punishes the sinned by slow death, having the guilty put the wrath upon themselves. She also brings in the supernatural to prove that even at death, there is no peace. The precise description of the moments before Catherine's death emotionally charges and further involves the reader. Like Catherine, Heathcliff dies in a similar fashion, except his sufferings prior to death lasted eighteen years. He explains to Nelly, "What does not recall her [Catherine]? Those two [Catherine Linton and Linton Heathcliff] are the only objects which retain a distinct material appearance to me; and, that appearance causes me pain, amounting to agony." This is consistent because he has sinned the most of all
The theme of destructive love within relationships in shakespeare’s Macbeth and Bronte’s Wuthering Heights are presented through sexism, jealousy, and betrayal. This three factors are the main causes of broken relationships and arguments between the partners. A good example would be the stories of Shakespeare’s Macbeth and Wuthering Heights. Sexism, jealousy, and betrayal can also lead to death in a destructive love. Love can be defined as an attraction of feelings, states, and attitudes that ranges from interpersonal affection to pleasure.
There are differential powers known as power dynamics at play in every type of relationships. In some partnerships there is an equal amount of power and respect divided into it, and in others, one partner holds most of the power. There are a lot of ways for women to gain control in a relationship. Shakespeare’s Macbeth shows us how lady Macbeth manipulated her husband and gained the upper hand in the relationship. Women should also follow the golden rule, to be respectful to their significant other, that way they can get treated with the same respect given. They should never settle with their partner because after any breakups or divorce, women are the ones that get hurt the most. (“Shakespeare’s Macbeth continue to figure the society’s genders and women rights”) -unsexing lady macbeth/ Thomas pg. 83.
In the story of The Tragedy of Macbeth and Wuthering Heights women show how they get control over the men. Lady Macbeth gets Macbeth to do what she wants by calling him rude names. But in Wuthering Heights Catherine gets what she wants by crying and being Ignorant. Wanting to be in a relationship is very terrible in some cases, because one of the partners will and in some cases all the time try to be the one in
Shakespeare has significant effect on gender role in the play. Shakespeare demonstrates this through Macbeth’s struggle for power, and his wife, Lady Macbeth. To be the leader in their relationship, Macbeth acts more feminine than masculine in their relationship during the early stages of the play. Macbeth and his wife seem to be a great couple. Things start to turn sour when Macbeth lusts for power and
Shakespeare’s play, Macbeth, begins with the protagonist, Macbeth, being faced with a supernatural prophecy. The temptation of power further corrupts Macbeth as the play progresses, until his murders catch up to him. Despite the time in which a man lives, he is surrounded by opportunity and the constant battle between the loss and acquisition of power. For those deep in search for power often experience the blurring of the lines between right and wrong. In the 17th century, gender roles were strict and unmoving. Men symbolized the power and strength, while the women represented the caring and submissive traits of human nature. Shakespeare utilizes Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s marriage to further toy with the audience’s minds and inverts the gender roles.Throughout the play, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s marriage demonstrates inverted gender roles; but as Lady Macbeth utilizes her influence over Macbeth, her driven attitude leads him down the path of corruption.
Analysis of Macbeth Macbeth, is one of the greatest tragedy plays written by William Shakespeare. It is a rather short play with a major plot that we had to follow it carefully to understand its significance. The play is a tragedy about evil rising to power, which ends up corrupting the main characters Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. In the opening of the play Macbeth is introduced to the audience as Thane of Glamis and is respected. The witches also play a major part in the play, as they predict the future.
Shakespeare and Emily Bronte show how women manipulate men. In act 1, scene 7, Macbeth is thinking about killing Duncan but when Lady Macbeth comes Macbeth changes his mind. Also in “Macbeth” Macbeth displays double trust. And in the novel Wuthering Heights, Catherine lets the reader knows how she is confused between who she loves and want to be with.
He took Catherine’s heart and hand in marriage and she told Nelly “It would degrade me to marry Heathcliff..” (Bronte 81). That choice that she made made Heathcliff leave and come back and make Isabella, Hareton, and Linton miserable. Catherine also sees Edgar only for money and all the wrong reasons she tells Nelly “And he will be rich, and I shall like to be the greatest woman of the neighbourhood and I shall be proud of having such a husband.” (Bronte 79).
Furthermore, when Heathcliff returns, Catherine should take no interest in trying to rekindle her feelings for him as Edgar had been putting in effort to make their marriage work 'Mr. Edgar had a deep-rooted fear of ruffling her humour' Up until this scene the couples were getting along and if Catherine had concealed her zealous behaviour towards Heathcliff then the calm atmosphere would have remained. Catherine rudely ignores her husband's presence to the extent that he demands the disrespectful behaviour to be stopped and a decision made 'Will you give up Heathcliff hereafter, or will you giver up me? It is impossible for you to be my friend and his at the same time…' Indeed, Edgar is right to put Catherine's in this difficult situation because any other typical husband at the time would have been less patient with Catherine or banned Heathcliff from the house at an earlier stage. Catherine struggles because the two men in her life represent two types if world and she cannot have both at the same time.
Bronte, The author of the Wuthering Heights, expresses many themes and morals in her book. The one most important in the Wuthering Heights is the theme of love and cruelty. The main characters, Catherine and Heathcliff, show these actions time and time again. They occur because of the other, much like the yin and the yang. Love leads to cruelty and cruelty leads to love. In Wuthering Heights, there are two different types of love shown: platonic and passionate. Both of these types of love lead to cruelty to other characters. As Heathcliff states boldly within the first few chapters of the novel, love’s cruelty survives even beyond death. “Cathy, do come. Oh do – once more! Oh! My heart’s darling; hear me this time, Catherine, at last!”
There is always a love/hate relationship between men and women. The theme of the essay is destructive love within relationships in Shakespeare's Macbeth and Bronte’s Wuthering Heights it's presenting through sexism, jealousy and betrayal.