Lady Macbeth persuades Macbeth to follow through with the plan to murder Duncan. She calls him a coward and less than a man, prodding Macbeth to follow her plan. Macbeth agrees to murder Duncan that night.
(Apex learning) she calls Macbeth weak and questions his strength of character, pushing him to agree to the crime.
The only thing I can think of is Shakespeare's Macbeth, where the main character (Macbeth)'s wife influences her husband to kill. You should look for the perswasive techniques Lady Macbeth uses to achieve this.
The witches only gave Macbeth prophecies. It was his decision to do so after Lady Macbeth persuaded him. Although the witches' intentions was probably to cause this murder, the witches did not make Macbeth muder Duncan.
She pressures him, using intense psychological pressure, to commit the murder which otherwise he would never have done. Review Act 1 Scene 7. On his own, Macbeth reaches the decision not to kill Duncan. He says, "We shall proceed no further in this business." Lady M then comes in, and by casting aspersions on his masculinity and other emotional tricks, causes him to make a 180 degree turn in the matter of a few lines. Macbeth is the one who uses the daggers, but Lady Macbeth is 100% the guiding mind and will behind the murder.
(Apex Learning) Lady Macbeth will make sure the guards are drugged, allowing Macbeth to sneak in and stab the king to death.
Lady Macbeth questions Macbeth to provoke him into taking action. She challenges his masculinity and questions his resolve in order to manipulate him into following through with their plan to kill King Duncan.
Lady Macbeth drugs the chamberlains with wine mixed with a potion to make them fall into a deep sleep, thus ensuring they will not interrupt Duncan's murder.
Apex- Lady Macbeth will make sure the Garda are drugged, allowing Macbeth to sneak in and stab the king to death.
Lady Macbeth uses Macbeth. She convinces him that he cannot wait for Fate to take its natural course. He must intervene to make things fir the prophecy; he must kill the king and frame his sons to make himself the heir to the throne.
Decisions are always hard to make, but have to be made everyday. People tend to put pressure on others to force them to make the wrong decisions. In Macbeth's case, Lady Macbeth is highly responsible for the evil doings of Macbeth, by forcing him to make the wrong choices, which puts his leadership at stake. She urges her husband to kill Duncan and become king, but is eventually driven to madness and suicide by her guilt over the bloodshed that follows. If it weren't for Lady Macbeth, Macbeth never would have killed anyone. At first, Macbeth felt he had no reason to kill King Duncan, because of the witches' prophecies which stated that in the future, he will become king. "If chance will have me king, why, chance may crown me without my stir." However, when Lady Macbeth found out about the prophecy that stated that Macbeth will become king, she immediately felt reason to murder him. "Is too full o' the milk of human kindness" shows that Lady Macbeth considers Macbeth to be a "wimp," and that she'll have to do this all by herself. "Leave all the rest to me" clearly states that Lady Macbeth takes control over Macbeth's thought which was not to kill Duncan, for he found no reason to. Lady Macbeth continues to convince and persuade Macbeth into her "plan" which is to kill King Duncan. Macbeth agrees to follow Lady Macbeth's thoughts and kills King Duncan. He regrets his actions afterward, which is proof that he never was willing to kill him in the first place. Macbeth has become deeply involved with murder, and eventually kills several others. This is proof that Lady Macbeth has transformed Macbeth into being a greedy, coldhearted human being, by saying things such as "Are you a man?" She undermines his masculinity, to make him feel at fault, and have it her way. Eventually, Lady Macbeth is driven to Madness by the guilt she holds on her shoulders, and ends up committing suicide. If it weren't for Lady Macbeth, Macbeth would have never killed anyone.
Macbeth's unchecked ambition and willingness to commit morally reprehensible acts, such as regicide, in order to secure and maintain power, ultimately lead to his tragic downfall. His guilt and paranoia over his actions, coupled with the manipulation and influence of the witches and Lady Macbeth, drive him to make increasingly desperate and destructive decisions, ultimately sealing his fate.
In Shakespeare's play "Macbeth," the three witches are the ones who make the prophecies about Macbeth becoming king. In addition to Lady Macbeth, Macbeth himself learns about the prophecies from the witches and later seeks them out for more information. Ultimately, Macbeth's actions are driven by his desire to fulfill the prophecies and maintain his position as king.
She helps Macbeth out by tricking him into killing the king. :P