Act I.7 line 35
Lady Macbeth meaning to the ornament of life can be refer to the golden opinions of line 33. It could even be refer to the crown.
MacDuff said this line.
"More needs she the divine than the physician."
Lady Macbeth says this just after Macbeth has murdered Duncan and there is a knock on their door. She says it Act 2 Scene 2 Line 70 in theoxford school version of the play.
It is not implied directly to us in the play, but yes, we can safely assume so. Besides, when Lady Macbeth finds out about the prophecy saying Macbeth would become king, she takes it that she would become queen. Now, its not very likely she would think that if she was his girlfriend!
Lady Macbeth meaning to the ornament of life can be refer to the golden opinions of line 33. It could even be refer to the crown.
The line "what's done, is done" is spoken by Lady Macbeth in the play Macbeth.
"Out damned spot" is a famous line from Shakespeare's play Macbeth, spoken by Lady Macbeth in Act 5. It refers to her guilt and the metaphorical stain of blood on her hands from the murders she and Macbeth committed. The line showcases Lady Macbeth's deteriorating mental state as her guilt overwhelms her.
MacDuff said this line.
Historically speaking, Lady Macbeth had a son by her first husband Gillecomlan called Lulach, who was adopted by his stepfather Macbeth. She and Macbeth had no children of their own. Although it was Lulach who became king after Macbeth, Shakespeare considered it dramatically unnecessary to include this fact in his play and so he does not appear. The idea that Lady M had been a mother makes sense of her line "I have given suck and know how tender 'tis to love the babe who milks me."
Macbeth receives the news of Lady Macbeth's death from Seyton, his servant. Seyton informs Macbeth that she has died by suicide.
Macduff greets Macbeth's announcement that he has killed the grooms with the line "Wherefore did you so?" Macduff seems to think that was a peculiar thing to do, since he asks why Macbeth did it. Macbeth has a ready answer, but then in the next scene Macduff chooses not to attend Macbeth's coronation, so maybe he was not convinced by the answer.
"More needs she the divine than the physician."
Lady Macbeth says this just after Macbeth has murdered Duncan and there is a knock on their door. She says it Act 2 Scene 2 Line 70 in theoxford school version of the play.
It is not implied directly to us in the play, but yes, we can safely assume so. Besides, when Lady Macbeth finds out about the prophecy saying Macbeth would become king, she takes it that she would become queen. Now, its not very likely she would think that if she was his girlfriend!
The Macbeth family victim list is: King Duncan, his two chamberlains, Macbeth's fellow general Banquo, Lady Macduff and her children. Eventually Lady Macbeth kills herself. Macbeth also kills young Siward towards the end and McDonald along with young siward during the battle when the forest "walks" up to the castle. the above is not exactly true - Macbeth kills - the traitorous Macdonwald, (mentioned in 1.2). Duncan, his two sleeping chamberlains, and young Siward. That's it. He hires murderers to kill Banquo and Fleance (they only get Banquo), as well as to kill Macduff and his family (they only get her son, and presumably, Lady Macduff - but in the text she exits before being killed) There is no evidence that Lady Macbeth kills herself, other than a line that she "tis thought, by self and violent hands took off her life"
Perhaps you are thinking of Lady Macbeth's line during her sleepwalking scene: "The thane of Fife had a wife--where is she now?"