Nope. Only death ends her suffering.
Nope. Only death ends her suffering.
Nope. Only death ends her suffering.
The doctor believes that Lady Macbeth needs spiritual healing rather than medical treatment. He suggests that she needs divine assistance to cure her troubled mind and conscience. It is implied that her ailment is more psychological and moral in nature, stemming from guilt and remorse over her involvement in Duncan's murder.
no she is a worthless peice of s h i t
If you have an illness medicine can help cure it
Lady Macbeth is determined to propel Macbeth to the throne . Lady Macbeth is advised that King Duncan will stay in the castle ;she is determinied to see him killed . When Macbeth returns she urges him to take the opportunity to kill the King. The King and the nobles arrive and Macbeth is emboldened to carry out the murder , but afterwards is filled with horror. Disgusted at his cowardice, Lady Macbeth completes the crime, incriminating the sleeping guards by smearing them with Duncan's blood and planting on them Macbeth's dagger.
to observe Lady Macbeth's unusual behavior. your welcome
The Doctor tells the waiting-woman to stay by her and keep sharp objects out of her way. The Doctor himself tells her and later Macbeth that what she needs is a priest or a psychologist and not a Doctor. Accordingly there is nothing he can do to help her. As for the waiting-woman, despite the Doctor's orders, Lady M apparently finds means to kill herself anyway. The waiting-woman wasn't much help either.
she gets the guards drunk so that they pass out allowing Macbeth to kill duncan.
Macbeth was worried about Lady Macbeth because she had begun sleepwalking. Because of this development, he called for the doctor to check on her. The gentlewoman was the woman who attended on Lady Macbeth, and who showed the doctor where she could be found at night. Both watch the sleepwalking scene. Later, the doctor reports his findings to Macbeth. "She is troubled by thick-coming fancies that keep her from her rest." But he tells Macbeth that there is no medical answer for her problem; "Therein the patient must minister to himself."
Lady Macbeth helped murder King Duncan by encouraging and manipulating her husband, Macbeth, to carry out the murder. She devised the plan, provided the logistics, and urged Macbeth to complete the deed. She also drugged the guards to ensure they would be unconscious during the deed.
Banquo, Fleance, Lady Macduff and her children