After she has gone crazy, she is observed sleepwalking by a doctor and a servant. She carries a light and the doctor asks where she got it. The servant replies, "Why, it stood by her; she has light by her continually; 'tis her command."
No it is Lady Macbeth that smears the guards with blood because Macbeth does not want to go back, so she goes and does it instead.
lady Macbeth prays to be unsexed because she thinks her femininity makes her weak she is too kind and gentle she needs her kindness to be taken away so she can plan the murder and make Macbeth kill king duncan
He didn't want to tell her of the horrible murder because she was a woman but ironically the killing was all her idea.
Lady Macbeth wasn't in on her husband's plans to kill Banquo. When she asked what his plans 'of dreadful note' [Act 3 Scene 2 Line 44] were, he didn't want her to know the specifics. But most likely yes, she would have wanted Macbeth to kill Banquo. Earlier in their conversation, she commented that Banquo and his son Fleance were mortal [and therefore killable?].
it means that one should use what ever they have to get where they want to be, to Macbeth this means that he should kill his king in order to become king
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.
No it is Lady Macbeth that smears the guards with blood because Macbeth does not want to go back, so she goes and does it instead.
Lady Macbeth wants people to believe that Macbeth's behavior is strong, decisive, and ambitious. She wants to portray him as a powerful and capable leader who is willing to do whatever it takes to achieve his goals.
lady Macbeth prays to be unsexed because she thinks her femininity makes her weak she is too kind and gentle she needs her kindness to be taken away so she can plan the murder and make Macbeth kill king duncan
He didn't want to tell her of the horrible murder because she was a woman but ironically the killing was all her idea.
She didn't want to kill him herself, because she said Duncan looked like her dad while he slept. She did have Macbeth murder Duncan nonetheless
Lady Macbeth wasn't in on her husband's plans to kill Banquo. When she asked what his plans 'of dreadful note' [Act 3 Scene 2 Line 44] were, he didn't want her to know the specifics. But most likely yes, she would have wanted Macbeth to kill Banquo. Earlier in their conversation, she commented that Banquo and his son Fleance were mortal [and therefore killable?].
Lady Macbeth wants it to be a dark and misty night because it will help conceal their actions and provide them with a cloak of secrecy as they carry out their plan to murder King Duncan. The darkness and fog create an atmosphere of concealment, making it easier for Macbeth and Lady Macbeth to go unnoticed and escape suspicion.
it means that one should use what ever they have to get where they want to be, to Macbeth this means that he should kill his king in order to become king
She was excited, obviously, and worried that Macbeth would not want to become king by the most obvious method--by murdering Duncan.
Her main concern is to keep the death of the king a secret, and she does not want Macbeth to spoil that up. She wants him to stay the king, so that she stays the queen.
Yes Macbeth did hesitate to murder King Duncan, he went through allot of mental turmoil about this decision. In his soliloquy he gave good reasons for not wanting to kill Duncan 1)he is not a bad king 2) he is there in double trust. In the end Macbeth did not want to kill Duncan but it was Lady Macbeth's persuasion that caused him to commit the act. In comparison Macbeth had no hesitate in killing Banquo and Lady Macduff.