In the beginning of the play, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are inseparable. They are always talking and conspiring. Lady Macbeth plans the murders and stakes her position as Macbeth's closest accomplice. However, towards the end of the play, they barely speak to one and other. Macbeth distances …show more content…
He believes that no one remains truly loyal to him, and that they talk about him in negative ways. This statement confirms that he believes that everyone only serves him in “mouth-honor” (V.iii.31), even Lady Macbeth. Lady Macbeth talks about Lady Macduff when she says: “The Thane of Fife had a wife. Where is she now?” (V.i.44). In this quote, Lady Macbeth questions what happened to Lady Macduff, the only other woman in the play, whose murder was ordered by her husband, Macbeth. Lady Macbeth contemplates her own position in Macbeth’s life. She realizes her usefulness to her husband barely exists anymore, judging by the lack of time he spends with her. She has seen him order the death of an innocent woman and her children, so what would stop him from murdering her if she became more of liability than an asset? She obviously explores the possibility of her own murder before she dies in the same …show more content…
Macbeth pries himself away from his once inseparable partner because she spouts their secrets around the castle and she cannot produce an heir. Macbeth has no use for her anymore. Shakespeare’s use of language also indicates a lack of emotion. The lack of emotion transforms Seyton’s lines relaying Lady Macbeth’s death from lines begging for sympathy for the suicidal character, to that of an orderly mercenary reporting back to his head of command. Like that of Banquo and Macduff’s family, her murder is ordered by a cold and calculating Macbeth who is desperately clinging at the threads of the robes whose of power “Hang loose about him, like a giant’s robe/ Upon a dwarfish thief”