Jade Taylor lives with her family. She has five sisters (Amelie, Emma, Blythe and Mimi). Her mother is a medium, so she focuses on the spiritual realm. Her father died of smallpox, leaving her mother in grief. This whole book starts off with Maude Taylor connecting with the spirit of Mary Adelaide. Mary Adelaide’s husband then thinks that Maude is just a fraud, when she connected with her. He thought she was a fraud because he was never okay with the spiritual realm. Sometimes, Mimi even thinks that her mother is a fraud, she sees her scribbling under the table when the lights are turned off, then she also pretends that she wrote them. Jade admire’s Mimi’s glossy beauty, she is influenced her. Since she has influenced by Mimi, she believes everything that she says. Later on, Mary Adelaide’s sister suggest to them that they should move to Spirit Vale because there is a lot of spiritualism there.…
Have you ever wondered what would have happen if certain characters didn't do or say certain things? Like what would've have happen if Macbeth didn't kill Duncan? I believe that Macbeth would have been a great leader. He wouldn't have any guilts, so he would actually lead the country in a good direction. Duncan would've probably sponsored Macbeth, therefore people would actually like him when he came to the throne. Banqou would still be alive, and with time he would've probably had more kids. Since the witches told him he wouldn't be king, but his children would be. The biggest thing I believe would have been in his favor is Divine Right. With that the universe would've not fallen out of balance, so he there would be peace. When he's time came…
"Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under't." (Act I, Scene V). Macbeth is to blame for King Duncan's death and for Banquo's assassination. Macbeth is to blame for his own actions that resulted in the terrible events that happened to Banquo, King Duncan, and the guards. Macbeth kills King Duncan and no one directly forced him to do that.…
Abraham Lincoln was born in early 1809. During Abraham’s childhood he was forced to work on farms, and had under a year of schooling, so he taught himself to read and write. He moved away from his family when he was 21 years old. He was a self-taught attorney that got his law degree at the age of 23.…
Lady Macbeth is more responsible for King Duncan’s murder because she had higher ambitions than Macbeth. She forced evilness upon herself and her high ambitions pushed her to the point of no regret for murdering the king. Lady Macbeth says, “Come, you spirits That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here, And fill me from the crown to the toe topful Of direst cruelty”(1.5.30-32). This is a clear example of how her ambitions have driven her to the point of evil acts to commit this crime. The act of calling for the evil spirits in order to follow through with a murder is a good reason why King Duncan was murdered. Lady Macbeth also had not only forced herself to murder the king but to force her husband to follow through with the plan of the murder…
For starters Macbeth eager desire to be king causes him to kill King Duncan. Macbeth killing the king shows his ambition because he keeps enduring with the process of killing the King Duncan even though he had doubts. With the many doubts that Macbeth had such as he would not be loyal or he would be caught and killed he reassured himself and persevered through his thoughts to accomplish killing the king. Lady Macbeth has a variety of events that shows her ambition in this play. In the play Lady Macbeth prays to invite spirts to help prepare her for the actions that she has commit. Lady Macbeth shows how ambitious she is because she prays asking for her emotions to be removed and to be filled with cruel spirts to help her accomplish planning for the event of killing the King so that Macbeth can become…
The second way Macbeth advances the plot is that he and his wife, Lady Macbeth, come up with a plan to murder the king. At the end of act one Macbeth says to himself very devilish, “With his surcease success…” (Shakespeare, 39). When Macbeth says, “his”, he is talking about the king, Duncan, and surcease means to come to an end which in this case means to end Duncan life. The plan works and he kills the king, which causes some people to flee. This is a very important to the plot because Macbeth does go ahead and kills Duncan which causes Macbeth to become king and really dictate what happens…
Lady Macbeth is greedy and ambitious. When Macbeth is considering not to go through with Duncan's murder Lady Macbeth says, “...Art thou afeard to be the same in thine own act and valor as thou art in desire?” (1.7.42-44). Lady Macbeth is making Macbeth feel guilty and like a coward, because he is considering not to go through with the murder. She is going make Macbeth kill the king, because she…
In the first two acts of Shakespeare’s Macbeth, Lady Macbeth shows herself to be a formidable woman with aspirations and a plan. She is clear about her desire to become Queen of Scotland and by way of her internal conversation, she plans her manipulation. By knowingly manipulating Macbeth and applying consistent pressure, Lady Macbeth executes her plan. She encourages Macbeth to see killing King Duncan as the only logical next step to fulfill the prophecy. Lady Macbeth’s intent, blatant disregard for life, and emotional manipulation of her husband make her morally responsible for the murder of King…
Macbeth is hesitant to act on the Witches prophecies and prefers to leave it to fate. This shows that initially Macbeth resists change. Lady Macbeth insults her husband’s manhood and convinces him to murder King Duncan, therefore beginning the process of change in Macbeth. The use of soliloquy and asides helps display to the audience how uncertain Macbeth is in his…
Macbeth shares information as important as becoming king with his wife, which one can assume he most likely would not have done if he believed the Weїrd Sisters to be telling lies. Even though Macbeth accepts what the witches have told him as truth, he still struggles with his free will and means of fulfilling the prophecy. When speaking with Lady Macbeth, he rejects her plan to kill King Duncan, the reigning King, and tells her that they will, “proceed no further in this business”(1.7.34). Macbeth begins this scene by having new information about his future proposed to him, and questioning how, and if, it is to come to be. By the end of the scene, he has accepted the inevitable outcome, yet still holds on to the means by which it is to happen.…
I was very confused at the beginning of the play. I thought it was weird with the witches, and I was still getting used to the old English language. I thought it started to get interesting when the witches had told Macbeth that he would become the Thane of Cawdor and then he actually did! I think this is what starts Macbeth’s ambition towards the series of events that will happen in the play. I think that the first three scenes in Act 1 set the dark mood for the entire play with the storm and witches ext. Once Lady Macbeth heard of what the witches had predicted I think was when Duncan’s life was officially over. Lady Macbeth kind of took over the play at this point. She is very persuasive, like convincing Macbeth that they were going to kill Duncan. She makes him feel as if he’s stupid and mocks him when he has fears about Duncan. I was surprised by Macbeth’s thoughts about killing Duncan I didn’t think he would do something so great, and I think that something is going to come back around to get him if he goes through with it. I think that he should just wait for his turn to be king. Lady Macbeth offers Macbeth a plan to kill Duncan, and he accepts. ____________________________________________________________…
The play begins with Lady Macbeth being an ambitious wife. Lady Macbeth first enters the play in scene five reading Macbeth’s letter and saying “Glamis thou art, and Cawdor; and shalt be What thou art promised." (i.v.13). Soon after, Lady Macbeth’s first plan is murder. This shows that she is ambitious because she determined to be the queen, even if it means doing something extraordinaire. Lady Macbeth later states “Yet do I fear thy nature,It is too full o' th' milk of human kindness To catch the nearest way.”(i.v.15) . This further proves her…
From the beginning Lady Macbeth is viewed as very controlling, strong, and certain. “First, she has very little regard for her husband's humanity and actually derides him for being "too full o'th' milk of human kindness” (Thompson 1). This shows how cold Lady Macbeth is, as milk is the food of new born children, she is implying Macbeth is too much like a kind child to murder anyone. Once Macbeth has the courage to tell her he does not want to continue with the murder she rallies, calling him a ‘coward’, saying that if he could murder Duncan ‘he were a man’. This to Macbeth, a proud and mighty warrior is a deep insult, and he soon is convinced that he will carry out the murder.…
Macbeth in the beginning of the play is a noble, humble and honourable person who, without question would sacrifice his life for the liberty of his King, Duncan. As the play progresses he attitude towards life in general changes completely, mainly due to the pressure that Lady Macbeth inflicts on him. However, Lady Macbeth has quite a surprising personality as she is not the stereotypical Elizabethan woman. Lady Macbeth is expected to be fragile, meek, innocent and comforting but in this unusual circumstance Lady Macbeth would very much rather “dashed the brains out” of an infant child. This is plain evidence to suggest that Lady Macbeth is of no stable condition. In addition to this surprising fact Lady Macbeth is cunning and bloodthirsty. She demands Macbeth in Act one, Scene Five to “look like th’innocent flower, but be the serpent under’t”. It is very common for a man to demand a female to pursue tasks but for a woman to demand a man, especially of something like sacrilege, is very unusual. This could mean two things, Macbeth is weak and is unable to depict his own decisions or/and that Macbeth is mentally deteriorating. Macbeth reason with Lady Macbeths orders in his soliloquy in Act one, Scene seven and from the things he…