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Answer:
The wife most likely wanted to be queen and rule. I feel like it was her plan for her husband to die, so she could take over the throne.
Answer:
Macbeth’s hamartia was his wife’s ambition, not his ambition. What the writer is forgetting to include in their essay is who guided Macbeth. In act 1, it's seen that Macbeth starts off feeling the thought of killing the king ‘horrifying’. “But if this is a good thing, why do I find myself thinking about murdering King Duncan, a thought so horrifying that it makes my hair stand on end and my heart pound inside my chest?” it states in the text. Without his wife, he would’ve never murdered the king.
This is shown later in scene 5 of act 1, how ambitious Lady Macbeth is of ending the king’s life. She even wishes she wasn’t a woman so she could kill the king herself - “Come to my woman's breasts, And take my milk for gall.” When Macbeth tells his wife that they can’t go on with this plan, where she just continues to peer pressure him. Macbeth would have never gone forth with this if it wasn’t for the overwhelming ambition his wife carried to kill the king.