Answer this question How does Lady Macbeth feel about her husband in the passage?
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Answer this question How does Lady Macbeth feel about her husband in the passage?
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Lady Macduff's sole appearance was in Act 4 Scene 2. She didn't appear to know or think much of her husband. The noble Scotsman Ross had brought her news of her husband's flight from Scotland. She first characterized her husband as mad for having left. She then characterized him as cold-hearted and selfish for having left his family in a place from which he had fled. She went on to characterize him as unloving for having abandoned her and his family. She ended up by characterizing him as a dead traitor.
She believes he is weak and won't do what needs to be done to become king.
Lady Macduff believes her husband is a traitor, driven mad by fear. She feels his fear led him to abandon her and their children. If Scotland was not safe for him then it was not safe for them and only a fearful man would have abandoned his family this way. She concludes he simply did not love them as even the smallest and weakest animal will fight for its children.
Both mention birds. Lady MacDuff references the wren, and MacDuff references chickens.
Lady Macduff and her son were killed by Macbeth's murderers. He killed them because he was really afraid of everything (after witches' predictions) and wanted to harm Macduff.
Well, if you mean killed, there were many! King Duncan, Banquo, Lady Macduff, Lady Macduff's son, other members of the Macduff family and Macbeth!
Lady MacDuff and her children are killed in Act 4 of "Macbeth". Macbeth hires assassins to kill the MacDuff family because he fears MacDuff is plotting against him..
Ross is trying to comfort Lady Macduff because he sympathizes with her plight and wants to offer her some support in her time of distress. He knows that her husband has fled the country, leaving her vulnerable and alone, so he tries to provide her with some solace and assurance.
Lady Macduff is angry because she feels abandoned and unprotected by her husband, who has fled to seek safety from Macbeth's tyranny. She questions his loyalty and courage, accusing him of being a coward for leaving his family vulnerable to dangers. Her anger reflects her fear and frustration at being left alone to fend for herself and her children in such a perilous situation.
Lady Macduff was created in 1603.
Lady Macduff believes her husband is a traitor, driven mad by fear. She feels his fear led him to abandon her and their children. If Scotland was not safe for him then it was not safe for them and only a fearful man would have abandoned his family this way. She concludes he simply did not love them as even the smallest and weakest animal will fight for its children.
Lady Macduff thinks her husband has left because he is a traitor and has abandoned them. She feels betrayed and abandoned, which causes her to question his loyalty and commitment to his family.
Both mention birds. Lady MacDuff references the wren, and MacDuff references chickens.
Lady Macduff has one son in Shakespeare's play Macbeth.
Answer #1 by Ginezumi Lady Macduff's main concern about her husband was the interpretation that others would give to his flight. She wasn't concerned about the reason that he might have had to do so. The nobleman Ross tried to tell her that she didn't have enough information to pass judgment on the why and wherefor, and that she should await word from Macduff as to the reason. But Macduff's Lady wouldn't listen. When she therefore moved from others' interpretations to her husband's motivations, she opted for madness, fear, or betrayal as reasons for her husband's escape. And so, in comparison to Lady Macbeth, Lady Macduff appeared to neither know nor understand her husband. By way of example, it would be interesting to look at Lady Macbeth's main concern about her husband. She knew him well, and always looked first to a husband's reasons and then to others' interpretations. And so her main concern was Macbeth's kindness. She feared his tendency to choose the morally correct way to get something done. She likewise feared his tendency not to do something that couldn't be done in a morally correct way. Answer #2 by Quailly3 Lady Macduff is mainly concerned with her husband's safety, even though he may be a traitor and he abandoned her and their children. She says to the murderers when they ask where Macduff is, 'I hope, in no place so unsanctified/That such as thou may find him'. She hopes that he is safe from the murderers even as she is threatened.
The messenger tells Lady Macduff that trouble is coming. To get her son and flee.
Lady Macduff believes that Macduff must not love her and their children because he has abandoned them and fled to England without saying goodbye or providing them with protection. She feels abandoned and betrayed by his actions, making her question his love for their family.
Macbeth Lady Macbeth Banquo Fleance Malcolm Donalbain Macduff Lady Macduff
Lady Macduff and her son were killed by Macbeth's murderers. He killed them because he was really afraid of everything (after witches' predictions) and wanted to harm Macduff.