Lady Macbeth said "Curse you !!" and also mentioned that she felt very guilty: "I am very sorry! I don't mean it!" and theres also when she sleepwalked, she sleepwalked and spread all her thoughts and secrets.
Lady Macbeth's famous last words before she died were "Out, damned spot! Out, I say!" as she lamented her guilt and attempted to wash away imaginary bloodstains from her hands, symbolizing her deteriorating mental state and the burden of her conscience.
In Act 1 Scene 5 of the Shakespearean play, Lady Macbeth [b. c. 1015] learned of the upcoming overnight visit of King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040] and of the witches' predictions of nobler, more royal career moves for her husband. The news brought out the darkly ambitious, unscrupulous side of her character. She wanted no obstacles in the way of such glorious job prospects for Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057]. And so she directed her prayers for victory to the dark spirits of the universe. Specifically, Lady Macbeth asked to be stripped of all feelings of compassion, conscience, and remorse. She prayed for the ruthless, remorseless, relentless, harsh, brutal strength to carry through on any necessarily foul means to win the kingship and queenship of Scotland for her and her husband's own.
Lady Macbeth says king Duncan resembles her father, so she encourages macbeth to murder him.
The play doesn't say.
I would say that Lady Macbeth is the most abitious out of the two.This is simple because the play is based around masculinity and In Lady Macbethsmonologue she says the words "unsex me here" and "Take my milk for gall"If we also look at the play in the moments before Duncan is killed, Macbeth has feelings that he shouldn't go through with what he is told to, but who else is there but Lady Macbeth to force him to see it through.In short, as soon as Lady Macbeth finds out what Macbeth is prophesized to become she really does start to pressure him into "Becoming a man" and fufilling what has been foretold.I hope this helped :)
In the original version of the play (Shakespeare's) Macbeth and Lady Macbeth do not have any children. You might of watched/read/heard a different version...
He is too full of the milk of human kindness to catch the nearest way.
The day after he arrives at their home.
This soliloquy from Lady Macbeth reveals her cunning and ambitious nature. She is willing to manipulate her husband in order to achieve her desired outcome of becoming queen. Lady Macbeth's willingness to go to extreme lengths to seize power establishes her as a dominant and morally ambiguous character.
Lady Macbeth is the more forceful, probably because she is less foresighted. Macbeth knows the likely consequences of his acts, but she does not. She cannot imagine the downside to the murder; all she sees is herself as the chatelaine, hosting dinner parties. This lack of foresight gives her the strength to use everything she's got to persuade Macbeth to the murder.
Lady Macbeth advised Macbeth to ignore his conscience and continue with their plan to kill King Duncan, even if he could not say amen after his prayers. She believed that their ambition was more important than moral guilt.
Macbeth is seeing the ghost of Banquo and this is causing him to act crazily, spoiling the party. Lady M tries to get him to settle down. But things get worse. Macbeth starts to say things which might give away the fact that he had Banquo murdered. Lady M then decides that she has to get rid of the guests.
Lady Macbeth says "Out, damned spot! out, I say!" while washing blood off her hands. She is tormented by guilt and is hallucinating the bloodstains that symbolize her role in the murder of King Duncan.
I think it's fair to say that he did love his wife but prior to the murders, their relationship may have been strained. In a scene, lady Macbeth is talking about how she would keep promises. She mentions that she would kill their own child if she promised to do so. This suggests that they did have a child who has died. Obviously, this would strain any relationship. Also, after the murders, they don't communicate like they used to, Lady Macbeth's conscience is taking over and Macbeth is too preoccupied with the fact that he is under threat and trying to kill people who pose a threat. Thus, causing strains on their relationship.