Shakespeare's Macbeth introduces numerous characters who possess traits of genuine humility and righteousness and genuine madness and greed. Taking a closer look at the characters Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, there is a notable difference in the analysis of each of these characters' evil being. Although both characters originally act together as deceitful, murderous, and heartless individuals, Macbeth continues to be overwhelmed by this dark character. Concluding therefore that Macbeth displays a more evil character than Lady Macbeth because he lacks emotional suffering, becomes what he originally repressed, and because he brings with him a typically malicious paranoia. Macbeth lacks emotional suffering. This particular trait, which makes him appear more evil than Lady Macbeth, recurs throughout the play. In cases where people close to him die, Macbeth shows no remorse or anguish over the situation. Taking for example his response when informed of his wife's death: "She should have died from then on." (Vv20). Continue to live and breathe as if the death had never occurred or as if the death were that of a stranger. Particular scenes such as the death of his wife, the death of Macduff's family, the death of all those he swore to kill, further specify those moments when his response can be considered ruthless and cold. Furthermore, his response to the strange sisters' hallucinations continues to demonstrate that Macbeth is emotionless. In this way, as Macbeth witnesses and is made aware of those who will die as a result of his encounter with him, instead of initially experiencing feelings of guilt and anger, he experiences satisfaction and laughter at their tragic future. A response to the second apparition... in the middle of the paper... continuous walking episodes. She has a mental breakdown and that's why he takes her life. She also does not decide to continue killing and is ultimately left out of the loop on the final acts of betrayal committed by Macbeth and company. Ultimately, Macbeth played a more evil character than Lady Macbeth immediately after Duncan's death. It seems that he needed Lady Macbeth's initial initiation to exert his full malevolent potential among those around him. His subsequent actions are not a response or a means to deal with the mental instability he suffered after Duncan's death, they are more representations and evidence that evil co-existed and lingered within him, waiting for the right moment to strike. and stay alive. Macbeth definitely surpasses Lady Macbeth on an evil scale, and there is no argument about that.
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