Respuesta :
Answer: Below should be the answer.
Explanation:
Alone on stage, Macbeth agonizes over whether to kill Duncan, recognizing the act of murdering the king as a terrible sin. He struggles in particular with the idea of murdering a man—a relative, no less—who trusts and loves him. He would like the king's murder to be over and regrets the fact that he possesses “vaulting ambition" without the ruthlessness to ensure the attainment of his goals (27).
As Lady Macbeth enters, Macbeth tells her that he "will proceed no further in this business" (31). But Lady Macbeth taunts him for his fears and ambivalence, telling him he will only be a man when he carries out the murder. She states that she herself would go so far as to take her own nursing baby and dash its brains if necessary. She counsels him to "screw [his] courage to the sticking place" and details the way they will murder the king (60). They will wait until he falls asleep, she says, and thereafter intoxicate his bodyguards with drink. This will allow them to murder Duncan and lay the blame on the two drunken bodyguards. Macbeth is astonished by her cruelty but resigns to follow through with her plans.
Answer:
Explanation:
In ''Macbeth'' Act 1, Scene 7, we find Macbeth alone, pacing back and forth because he's having second thoughts about killing King Duncan as he is a loyal subject to Duncan. He has problems with this plan because he sees no reason, other than his own ambition, to murder the king which Lady Macbeth is trying to awaken his ambition to kill Duncan. In response, a raging Lady Macbeth calls him a coward and emasculates him.
Hope this help