Macbeth
... the things she desired. When reading Macbeth's letter that told of the witches' prophecy she said, "Yet do I fear thy nature; it is too full o' the milk of human kindness to catch the nearest way." She’s the kind of person who enjoys taking the quick and dirty route to royalty such as the murder of Duncan. Macbeth other the other hand is shown as one who is ‘too full o'th'milk of human kindness.” He is a very kind and a worthy gentleman and one who loves his dearly wife, Lady Macbeth. He loves and cares for Lady Macbeth and often refers her as “my dearest partner of greatness.” Later on in the play, Lady Macbeth begins to manipulate Macbeth and challenges his feelings of guilt and pity for King Duncan and replaces them with malicious and spiteful feelings: “look like th'innocent flower, but be the serpent under't.” Soon Lady Macbeth herself calls on evil spirits to “un sex me here” and she becomes one who is fill with cruelty and who longer has her all natural womanly compassion. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s relationship grew fine until a conflict happens between them. Macbeth has a conflict with what Lady Macbeth is instructing and his loyal personality is urging him not to fulfill the “horrid deed” ‘First, I am his Kinsman and his subject, strong both against the deed; then, as his host, who should against his murderer shut the door, not bear the knife myself’ After the incident of killing Duncan, Macbeth becomes so absorbed in his mixed feelings about the murder, he withdraws from the loving relationship that he had with Lady Macbeth in the beginning of the play. Lady Macbeth becomes weak and is soon overcome by her own guilt and becomes patently mad. She becomes hallucinated and constantly cries out, “'out damned spot! Out, I say”, and to an extent she begins sleepwalking, talking to herself, and seeing blood occasionally. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth’s relationship begins to drift apart when Macbeth's character changed in a much different manner. For example, after killing the king and his empowerment, he soon begins doing things on his own and become the more dominant on...