Lady Macbeth: '"Look like the innocent flower, but be serpentunder't"'
Theme
Appearance vs Reality
Juxtaposition
"flower", which connotes femininity, with "serpent", which connotes masculinity and trickery, shows how there can be a dangerous divide between a person's appearance and nature
"Serpent"
Could link to the biblical story of Adam and Eve
"Look like th' innocent flower, but be the serpent under't"
Could link to "Fair is foul and foul is fair" in Act 1 Scene 1, and this is why some theorise Lady Macbeth is the 4thwitch
"Look like th' innocent flower, but be the serpent under't"
Passive image "innocent flower" juxtaposes activecorruption of "the serpent", reflecting the ideas of "fair" and "foul" in Act 1, Scene 1. Distinction is not a predicament, but becomes a specificstrategy to gain political power.
Relate to biblicalallusions - Garden of Eden. Is especially evocative as Lady Macbeth is engaged in supernaturalpaganism; she is asking her husband symbolically to strikeout against Christian ideals - role of biblicalvillain?
"A littlewater will clear us of this deed": 'Act 2 scene 2'
Lady Macbeth's calm demeanor after the murder
Shows power and manipulation over their relationship
Foreshadows her madness driven by the guilt - where she can't wash off the blood from her hands
Contrasts to Macbeth's beliefs of the water clearing them "great Neptune's oceans"
"Unsex me here": 'Act 1 scene 5'
"When u durst do it, then you were a man": 'Act 1 scene 7'