Every character has a flaw; Lady Macbeth and Jane Eyre are no exceptions. Lady Macbeth's flaw is ambitious greed. This flaw can influence Jane's which is her enduring desire to be loved and accepted. Lady Macbeth seems to have harsh control over her people and their emotions, like that of her husband Macbeth. By enticing him to commit a murder, this shows her tyrannical and manipulative tendencies. Jane's flaw leads her to be engulfed by her adversary's greed. Eventhough Jane is incoherent with grief when Rochester's secret is let out; she still cares for him and his safety. Consequently, Lady Macbeth would want her to deceive her true feelings and leave Rochester at his weakest moment to further his agony due to what emotional harm he out her through. This would strictly go against the character that the author, Charlotte Bronte, wanted to portray in Jane. She is by nature loving and only wants to be loved in return. Lady Macbeth's ruthlessness would reveal how receptive and caring Jane is. Lady Macbeth took charge of her husband's life. This trait would show Jane's amicability. She never forced Rochester to make any rash decisions due to her desires. Jane leaves Thornfield to show her strength against a love that would make her compromise herself, and jeopardize her independence. Nevertheless, she gives in to her conscience and eventually returns after Rochester mysteriously calls to her. As the caring person she is, she cannot leave her love blind, cripple, and alone. She cannot help but feel responsible for leaving Rochester in such a horrible state. She knows what her escape did to him. On the other hand, Lady Macbeth is an advocate for selfishness, and this would sharply contradict this trait in Jane. By killing herself, she left her husband alone to deal with the blood they had shed together, thought it was physically Macbeth who slain the people, and the emotional half was due to Lady Macbeth's greed and selfishness.