Both Miss Havisham and Lady Macbeth show bitterness when they are first introduced and both share determination. Both characters in the end feel guilty HOWEVER Lady Macbeth fails to know her mistakes.
Miss Havisham is a wealthy, eccentric woman who is jilted at the altar and becomes bitter and reclusive. Lady Macbeth, on the other hand, is ambitious and manipulative, urging her husband to commit murder to fulfill her own ambitions. Miss Havisham is a tragic figure consumed by her past, while Lady Macbeth is a ruthless and ambitious character driven by power.
Irrelevant. The portions of Macbeth which feature Hecate are thought not to have been written by Shakespeare, are not helpful to the plot and are rarely if ever performed.
Lady Macbeth in Shakespeare's play Macbeth says, 'You know your own degrees'
William Shakespeare wrote Macbeth
Macbeth in Shakespeare's The Tragedy of Macbeth Lear in Shakespeare's King Lear Hamlet in Shakespeare's Hamlet Brutus in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar
Shakespeare was a man and Anne was a woman. Coincidentally the same applies to Macbeth and Lady Macbeth.
I assume you meant "Why did Shakespeare make Macbeth a villan?" Well, what could the storyline have been if he wasn't a villan? Shakespeare's Macbeth was based on the real Macbeth. He murdered his king, Duncan, and became king. I guess that means that the real Macbeth was a villan, and so Shakespeare only kept it that way, showing it wasn't Shakespeare that made his character of Macbeth a villan.
Why do you think Macbeth is startled by the witches prediction's in act 1 of Macbeth by Shakespeare
Lady Macbeth is often portrayed as a fourth witch.
Macbeth was not a fictional character made up by Shakespeare. He was based on a historical character, although he is not in any way like the real historical Macbeth. Shakespeare took most of the story of Macbeth from the history book Holinshed's Chronicles which contains most of the events shown in the play. Shakespeare did develop the character of Macbeth found in Holinshed, but he did not invent him.
no
Shakespeare