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Macbeth
Heather Timberman
Macbeth is the ultimate story of betrayal, ambition and greed. The play is written in a
dreamlike state, sometimes considered a dream itself, and the two leading characters have
been analyzed by more psychologists and scholars alike than almost any other character in
literature. However, few can agree on how to interpret them. Even the great Sigmund Freud
didnt have much to say on the matter. He claimed it was impossible to come to any decision
as the play progresses far too quickly for any singular character to develop fully (Freud E-2).
Yet this has not stopped his students from coming up with a sufficient analysis of Lord and
Lady Macbeth, and the analysis have attempting to discover a motive for the couple to jump
to the conclusion of murder.
There are a few approaches one can take when psychoanalyzing the Lord and Lady
Macbeth. First off, one has to decide to read the characters as such or as real people. For the
purposes of psychoanalysis, it makes the most sense to assume the latter of the two. Once
that is decided, it can then either be assumed that Lord and Lady Macbeth are two separate
entities or that they are two parts of one being.
Taken as herself, Lady Macbeth originates the stronger of the two conspirators. There is no
hesitation in her will for Duncan to die. According to Norman Hollands book Psychoanalysis
and Shakespeare, Lady Macbeth is discouraged by her husbands impotence. She therefore
decides to focus all of her energies on her husbands ambitious plans (Holland p 65). She
even goes so far as to give up all that is womanly and dedicate herself to cruelty, in order to
gain status (Davis p 213).
Come to my womans breasts and take my milk for gall, you murdering ministers (Act 1,
Scene 5, lines 47-48).
Derek Davis goes to claim that it could be due to losing so many children in infancy (p 213).
Though the text never states verbatim that Lady Macbeth ever lost a child, it can be
reasonably assumed that this is the case. In Act One, the lady makes a reference to having
suckled a child before:
I have given suck, and know how tender tis to love the babe that milks me (Act1, Scene 7,
lines 55-56.)
As the play progresses, it seems obvious that Lady Macbeth is the stronger than her
husband. This is most apparent in the banquet scene of Act three. Macbeth begins to images
of Banquos ghost everywhere. It is Lady Macbeth who maintains a sense of order in the
situation. She admonishes her husbands behavior, goes on to excuse her husbands
apparent illness and then sends the guest away:
You have displaced the mirth, broke the good meeting with most admired disorder
He grows worse and worse; Question enrages him. At once, good night. Stand not upon the
order of your going, But go at once. (Act 3, Scene 4, lines 109-110, 118-121).
Macbeth is driven to murder through similar motives of inadequacy. Davis claims that even
though Macbeth has received various acclaims to fame due to his battle prowess, he is
unable to acclimate himself back into society (p 210). Davis compares this to the state of
Generals returning from the Second World War. Many who rose to higher ranks ran into a
demobilisation crisis, trying to assert themselves in their civilian lives as they had on the battle
field, often finding that this was not possible. Because of this, he is more susceptible to the
witches prophesy (p 213).
In his essay, Macbeth: Drama and Dream, Simon O. Lesser goes even further to suggest
that Macbeth is only able to kill due to his crippled ego (Lesser p 221). Lesser claims that
Macbeth killed for a role that he knew he was unable to fulfill in the hopes that it would make
himself feel better about his life (Lesser p224). When the play opens, on finds an unhappy
Macbeth, middle-aged, childless, and loveless without any interest outside of war. Freud
argued that the lack of children increased his sense of isolation and his lack of compassion
(Davis p 214). He, like his wife, is trying to fill the void in his life by any means necessary.
Macbeth is also fulfilling the oedipal role of the bad son (Lesser p 224). He has no real hatred
for Duncan before or after the murder. In fact all he has is praise for the old man:
This Duncan hath borne his faculties so meek, hath been so clear in his great office, that his
virtues will plead like angels, trumpet-tongued, against the deep damnation of his taking off
(Act 1, Scene 7, Lines 16-20).
However, in order to prove himself as a man to both he and his wife, he needs to kill his
surrogate father and marry his mother, or in this case, Scotland.
This causes Macbeth much grief. His ego becomes so crippled by his severe super ego that
he begins to behave as one with an obsession or compulsion (Lesser p 221). This explains
his ability to murder as his id and super ego are continuously in battle with no mediation from
the ego (p 222). Thus, he is constantly punished before, during, and after each act he
commits.
Avaunt, and quit my sight! Let the earth hide thee! Thy bones are marrowless, thy blood is
cold; Thou hast no speculation in those eyes which thou dost glare with (Act 3, Scene 4, lines
94-97)!
Almost in an effort to reduce Macbeths frenzy and despair, the witches appear again. They
offer Macbeth a sense of invulnerability. They prophesy that:
None of woman born shall harm Macbeth (Act 4, Scene 1, lines 80-81).
This almost becomes a phrase of power creating in Macbeth delusions of grandeur and
omnipotence, symptoms of paranoia (Davis p222).
After the death of Lady Macbeth, he becomes even more disillusioned with life. The couple
has become so distanced from each other that he barely even notices her death:
He goes on to say that life is a tale told by and idiot, full of sound and fury, signifying nothing
(Act 5, Scene 6, lines 26-28). He welcomes death to him, and eventually it comes, ironically
in the form of a man ripped from his mothers womb.
Freud, in his book Some Character-types Met With In Psycho-analytical Work refuses to take
this approach. He comes to the conclusion that the two characters are one in the same.
Referencing the studies of Ludwig Jekels, he claims that Shakespeare would often split a
character into two personages (Freud E-4). The fear that was started upon the first murder,
though they were indeed brewing in Macbeth, ultimately surface in the character of Lady
Macbeth, while Macbeth himself takes on her position as a cold blooded killer.
However, most analysts agree that Macbeths main motivation towards murder is his lack of
an heir. The ultimate isolation brought upon by knowing ones legacy ends with ones own life
is enough to drive any man to despair. Add on top of that, insatiable aspirations and perfect
opportunity and you have the perfect recipe to drive a man to murder a king.