Lady Macbeth is Shakespeare's portrayal of Lady Grouch. More or less they are the same, but with some differences where Shakespeare took creative liscence.
same evil ideas
Shakespeare was a man and Anne was a woman. Coincidentally the same applies to Macbeth and Lady Macbeth.
I was wondering the same thing ... -.-
Our Lady of Fatima, Our Lady of Guadelupe, The Virgin Mary, St. Mary - they are all the same person.
No, they aren't the same person.
The grooms of his chamber, his personal servants who sleep in the same room with him.
Words that have the same vowel sound as "grouch" include pouch, ouch, slouch, and crouch.
Lady Macbeth does not convince Macbeth to kill Macduffs family. She convinces him to kill the King at the start of the play, but after that she has no input in the decisions he makes. Macbeth chooses to have Macduffs family killed so that he may seize the Macduff castle for his own. The witches also tell him to 'beware Macduff' when he visits them and so he feels threatened by him. Macbeth doesn't actually personally kill Macduffs family either, he hires the same thugs that he hires to assassinate Banquo and Fleance to murder him.
When Macbeth starts having second thoughts about killing the king, Duncan, Lady Macbeth questions his manhood and says he is a coward. She says she would have killed her own baby rather than break a promise such as the one Macbeth made her (to kill Duncan). She also says that her love for him from that time onwards will depend on whether he kills the king or not.
No. There are four vowel sounds that OUGH can have. Dough (long O) does not have the same one as grouch (ow sound as in couch).
In Act 1 Scene 7 of the Shakespearean play, Lady Macbeth [b. c. 1015] played an important role in the course of events. Her husband, Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057], didn't want to proceed in the killing of King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040]. Lady Macbeth succeeded in getting her husband back on course, on the same page with her. Macbeth tried to get what he wanted or what was his due by going by the book. But his wife managed to convince him that they couldn't wait for the throne of Scotland to fall into their laps. They needed to take action even if it meant heinous deeds. In essence, Lady Macbeth persuaded her husband that the ends justified the means.
Banquo said that King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040] had given a diamond to Lady Macbeth [b. c. 1015]. In Act 2 Scene 1 of the Shakespearean play, the King was an overnight guest of the Macbeths' at Inverness Castle. Macbeth and his wife in fact had been given same-day notice of the royal visit. Macbeth's Lady nevertheless managed to have her household ready for the royal stay. She also managed to impress the King with her sensitive capabilities as a hostess.