I wrote the diary telling about Lady Macbeth’s madness under the perspective of an imagining doctor. It was written in simpatico tone and hopes to explain more about Lady Macbeth’s situation after Duncan’s death.
In my diary, I tried to use sympathy phrase such as: Poor her, sad for her. I tried to evaluate Lady Macbeth’s responsibilities on Duncan’s death and how scared she feels in modern language. The details of the diary are linked closely to the action of Lady Macbeth in the play.
I chose this topic, because I want to bring out the idea of Lady Macbeth under others readers’ perspective and I want this creative piece of writing to be interesting and unique. (117)
Diary of Lady Macbeth’s doctor.
Britain, December 9, xxxx
The story happened long time ago, when I first became a therapist. My first patient was Lady Macbeth – the queen of Scotland. I still remember the first day I saw her sitting in my office, with a nurse sitting right next to her. She sat there, looking scared. When I walked in, she startled for a second, then after her nurse whispered something to her, she calmed herself down and eventually smile, but you can see a sad glance in those eyes. Poor her, a young, beautiful lady with big blue eyes and long brown hair. Why she needed a nurse, you might ask. Well, she seemed to be frustrated and she could not speak much. All she did was talking, if I might say, rather mumbling to herself. Her nurse told me that she had been like that for already few days. When we were gathering in the room, Lady Macbeth was constantly murmuring about the dark spots she had on her hands, while I saw nothing but a silky palm. And then for a few minutes she sat there rubbing her hands, kept telling the spots to go away. As she said that she could not get rids of those spots, she smelled them, and screamed it out loud: “blood, blood”. Even her nurse could not stop her, and Lady Macbeth kept running around like a crazy woman... I had a good