Table of Contents
- 1 What does the doctor mean when he talks about infected minds?
- 2 What is the doctor referring to when he says Therein the patient must minister to himself?
- 3 What is the main message of Macbeth in Act 5 Scene 1 which includes Lady Macbeth’s sleepwalking scene?
- 4 Why does the Gentlewoman in Act V Scene I refuse to repeat Lady Macbeth’s sleep talk to the doctor?
- 5 What does the Doctor think about Lady Macbeth’s state of insanity?
What does the doctor mean when he talks about infected minds?
The Doctor means that Lady Macbeth has upset the natural balance by doing evil things. It talks about how her mind has been infected by evil spirits and now the truth is revealed in her sleep. This is a direct reference to remind the audience of the witches prophecy.
What does the doctor mean when he says unnatural deeds do breed unnatural troubles How does this quotation apply to the play as a whole?
In this instance he means that any crime becomes a breeding place for greater perturbation and problems. The doctor is suggesting that Lady Macbeth’s thoughts and her conscience have been diseased by the unnatural deeds that she has been involved in, thus causing her great harm.
What does the doctor mean by and still keep eyes upon her?
She’s “seeing” things on her skin – the blood – that she feels won’t go away. You just studied 16 terms! 1/16.
What is the doctor referring to when he says Therein the patient must minister to himself?
What is the doctor referring to when he says “Therein the patient must minister to himself? He is saying that Macbeth is trying to tell the doctor how to cure his patient, lady Macbeth, when Macbeth is the patient himself.
What do the doctor and gentlewoman know why won’t they speak out?
Why won’t the doctor or gentlewoman tell anyone what they have seen or heard? Because telling people about Lady macbeth’s odd condition would basically be telling people that Lady Macbeth and her husband have murdered their way to the throne, something everyone suspects but no one dares to admit.
What does the doctor say Lady Macbeth needs more than medicine?
He says that her illness is beyond his medicine for the physical body – she needs something for her soul (More needs she the divine than the physician) and that Lady Macbeth will have to help herself.
What is the main message of Macbeth in Act 5 Scene 1 which includes Lady Macbeth’s sleepwalking scene?
What is the main message of scene 1, which includes Lady Macbeth’s sleepwalking scene? That they killed Banquo. A guilty conscience is not easily mended. What does Macbeth’s behavior toward the servant who comes to deliver a message ultimately show about Macbeth’s character?
What does the candle represent in Macbeth Act 5 Scene 1?
The candle is a symbol used in the play to represent life and goodness. According to the article Symbolism in Shakespeare’s Macbeth, the candle represents her desire to dispel evil and darkness.
Why does the doctor tell the gentlewoman to remove from Lady Macbeth the means of all annoyance and still keep eyes upon her?
The doctor has just witnessed Lady Macbeth at the height of her madness. He is disturbed by it, and he asks the gentlewoman to “look after” her mistress, who, he thinks, needs the help of God more than his own. Because Lady Macbeth is so unwell, the “means of annoyance” should be removed.
Why does the Gentlewoman in Act V Scene I refuse to repeat Lady Macbeth’s sleep talk to the doctor?
The Doctor insists that it would be right for her to tell him the details. However, the Gentlewoman says she will not tell anyone, “having no witness to confirm my speech.” She means that since she was the only one to hear what Lady Macbeth has said, she may not be believed or trusted.
Why does the doctor tell the waiting Lady to take Lady Macbeth?
In The Tragedy of Macbeth, Act V, when the doctor tells the waiting-gentlewoman to take from Lady Macbeth “the means of all annoyance,” it is because he fears that Lady Macbeth might. try to kill herself.
Why should the means of annoyance be removed from Lady Macbeth?
Because Lady Macbeth is so unwell, the “means of annoyance” should be removed. The key word here is “means.” It’s tempting to translate this into modern English as something like “take away anything that might be upsetting or annoying her,” but that’s not quite accurate.
What does the Doctor think about Lady Macbeth’s state of insanity?
Evidently, then, the doctor thinks that Lady Macbeth’s state of insanity might turn towards the suicidal. Given the way she has behaved, if she has access to a weapon, she might even kill herself with it inadvertently, thinking it to be something else.
What does the Doctor mean by means of annoyance?
In this sense, the “means of annoyance” are “things with which harm or injury could be caused.”. So, while the doctor certainly does want the gentlewoman to try and calm down Lady Macbeth and make her comfortable, he is here quite specifically asking her to clear the room of anything that might be used as a weapon by Lady Macbeth,…