In her actions of begging to be made cold to face the murder she plans to commit, it is showcase her methodical train of thought and her cunningness, to achieve what she wants. Her ambition is seen when she asks, “That my keen knife see not the wound it makes, Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark To cry “Hold, hold!” (Act 1, Scene 5) She knows her own weakness. She claims she is more manly than Macbeth, that she can carry out the act because he is too cowardly. But she knows her conscious will battle with her if she has to be the one who thrusts the blade into duncan, sealing his fate. She asks to not see the wound she makes so she will have a clear conscious and will not be riddled with guilt. When it is Macbeth who physically plunges the metal deliverance of death into the lively flesh of the King, she feels as though she does not have the blood on her hands by using her manipulativeness to get what she wants, but in her mind she didn't inflict any
In her actions of begging to be made cold to face the murder she plans to commit, it is showcase her methodical train of thought and her cunningness, to achieve what she wants. Her ambition is seen when she asks, “That my keen knife see not the wound it makes, Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark To cry “Hold, hold!” (Act 1, Scene 5) She knows her own weakness. She claims she is more manly than Macbeth, that she can carry out the act because he is too cowardly. But she knows her conscious will battle with her if she has to be the one who thrusts the blade into duncan, sealing his fate. She asks to not see the wound she makes so she will have a clear conscious and will not be riddled with guilt. When it is Macbeth who physically plunges the metal deliverance of death into the lively flesh of the King, she feels as though she does not have the blood on her hands by using her manipulativeness to get what she wants, but in her mind she didn't inflict any