Macbeth quotes online 2

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111 Terms

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"Fair is foul, and foul is fair"
Witches, Act 1 Scene 1
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"When the hurly-burly's done/When the battle's lost and won"
Witches, Act 1 Scene 1
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"So foul and fair a day I have not seen"
Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 3
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"instruments of darkness" "cannot be ill, cannot be good"
About the Witches, Act 1 Scene 3
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"Lesser than Macbeth and greater"
Witches (about Banquo) Act 1 Scene 3
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"Plant thee" "make thee full of growing"
Duncan, Act 1 Scene 4
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"signs of nobleness, like stars, shall shine/ On all deservers"
Duncan, Act 1 Scene 4
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"unsex me here"
Lady Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 5
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"The raven himself is hoarse that croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan"
Lady Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 5.
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- Raven symbolises death.
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The adjective 'fatal' means deadly or dangerous - foreshadows that something bad is going to happen to Duncan
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"Come, you spirits" "Come to my woman's breasts" "Come,thick night"
Lady Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 5
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- Talk of spirits links her to the witches.
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- Repetition of "come" is an imperative verb that sounds like she is casting a spell.
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- Triadic structure (The Rule of Three) - links her to the three Witches.
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"And fill me, from the crown to the toe, top-full of direst cruelty"
Lady Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 5
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- Metaphor suggests how she want to be full of evil
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- Adjective "direst" means the worst, worst kind of cruelty
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- Adjective "crown" also metaphor for wanting to be King
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"make thick my blood, Stop up th'access and passage to remorse"
Lady Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 5
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- Metaphor for make her more manly, blood thicker so feeling of pity won't flow to her heart
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"Come to my woman's breasts and take my milk for gall"
Lady Macbeth Act 1, Scene 5
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- Imagery relate to her child dying, wants her milk to turn into poison out of spite/grief
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- suggests she wants to give her "breasts" which symbolise femininity
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Macbeth's castle "sweetly recommends itself"
Duncan, Act 1 Scene 6
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Irony - Duncan feels safe and comfortable in Macbeth's castle even though we as an audience know that Macbeth is gonna kill him there.
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"that we but teach bloody instructions, which, being taught, return to plague th'invenntor"
Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 7
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- Macbeth knows that if he kills Duncan's he's likely to end up being killed himself
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"vaulting ambition"
Macbeth, act 1 Scene 7
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- Macbeth knows his own hamartia (down-fall)
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- "Vaulting" suggest his ambition is powerful, over-reaching
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"so much more a man"
Lady Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 7
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- Lady Macbeth implies Macbeth will be more manly if he kills Duncan
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- Dual Meaning : will be more manly but also will be King
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- Questions his masculinity to encourage violence
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"I have given suck, and know how tender 'tis to love the babe that milks me: I would while it was smiling in my face have plucked my nipple from his boneless games, and dashed the brains out"
Lady Macbeth, Act 1 Scene 7
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"Is this a dagger which I see before me"
Macbeth act 2 scene 1
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"Will all great Neptune's ocean wash this blood clean from my hand? No"
Macbeth Act 2 Sene 2
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Neptune is Roman God of water and sea
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Suggests not even the whole sea, ruled by a powerful god could wash the blood off his hands
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"blood clean from my hand" symbolises his guilt about killing Duncan
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Foreshadows Lady Macbeth hand washing Act 5
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"murdered sleep"
Macbeth, Act 2 Scene 2
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sleep symbolises peace, emphasises his guilt.
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Foreshadows Lady Macbeth sleep walking Act 5
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"mad" "brain-sickly"
Lady Macbeth to Macbeth, Act 2 Scene 2
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ironic foreshadowing of her own madness later
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"[knocking]" repeated 4 times
Stage Direction, Act 2 Scene 2
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symbol of Macbeth's guilt, metaphor for his pounding heartbeat
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"[the storm]prophesying with accents terrible/Of dire combustion and confused events"
Lennox about storm, Act 2 Scene 3
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Storm reflect terrible events of Duncan's murder
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use of weather/pathetic fallacy foreshadows more bad things to come
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"dark night strangles the travelling lamp"
Act 2, Scene 4
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shows how it is dark during the day - Duncan's murder has caused the disruption of the natural order (Divine right of Kings, Chain of Being)
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symbolises evil through violent language of "strangles"
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"A falcon, towering in her pride of place, was by a mousing owl hawked at and killed"
Act 2, Scene 4
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shows further disruption of natural older
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Falcon symbolic of Duncan (bigger, stronger King) killed by owl (weaker) Macbeth - reversal of the Chain of Being
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"full of scorpions in my mind" "the bat has flown"
Act 3, Scene 2 Macbeth
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- metaphor represent the evil thoughts and unsettling tone.
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- "The bat has flown" also a metaphor, reminds the audience of falcon and the owl creates a sense of paranoia.
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"Are you a man?"
Act 3, Scene 4
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Lady Macbeth questions Macbeth's masculinity again in response to his fear of Banquo's ghost - she is taking back control
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"play the humble host"
Act 3, Scene 4
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Use of the verb "play" emphasise that Macbeth is playing the part of host and king, his hospitality his fake
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"cabined, cribbed, confined"
Act 3, Scene 4
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Macbeth, alliteration emphasise that he is feeling trapped
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"I am in blood/Stepped in so far"
Act 3, Scene 4
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metaphor of "in blood" suggests Macbeth feels guilty for the murders, "stepped in so far" shows he can't take it back
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"Double, Double toil and trouble"
Act 4, Scene 1
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Witches cast a spell, imply evil things are going to happen.
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double suggest double meanings
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"Something wicked this way comes"
Act 4 Scene 1
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Macbeth has changed from a brave hero to an evil person, suggested by adjective Wicked
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"[Thunder.The First Apparition, a helmeted head, rises into sight]"
Act 4 Scene 1
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Thunder - pathetic fallacy, something bad is going to happen.
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apparition of armoured head represent 2 things:
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- Foreshadow Macbeth's death, he is decapitated
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- Foreshadows the violence of the battle
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Three Apparitions
represent the three witches, who are responsible for the apparitions that drive Macbeth's ambition
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"Thunder. The Second Apparition, a blood-stained child, rises into sight"
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Apparition says - "none of woman borne/shall harm Macbeth"
Act 4, Scene 1.
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Macbeth takes this at face value at things no one will ever harm him , feels and secure.
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However, false sense of safety because Macduff was born by Caesarean section (from the tummy) rather than traditionally born- Macduff later kills him
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"Thunder. The Third Apparition, a child crowned, with a tre e in his hand rises into sight"
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"Macbeth shall never vanquished be, until Great Birnham Wood to high Dunsinane Hill shall come against him"
Act 4 Scene 1
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Macbeth feels secure because he thinks its impossible foe Birnham Wood to literally come to Dunsinane
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Child represent Malcom, holding branch symbolise growth of Scotland under his rightful rule
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"Thy crown does sear mine eyeballs"
Act 4 Scene 1
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crown is worn in an apparition by Banquo's descendants
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The verb "sear" which means to burn, suggests Macbeth's anger at seeing Banquo's kids in line for the thrown.
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"All my pretty ones?/Do you say all? O hell-kite! All?/ What, all my pretty chickens"
Act 4 Scene 3
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Macduff hearing about his families' murder.
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- Repetition "pretty" suggest his affection and love for his family.
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- Use of possessive pronoun "my" shows his closeness towards his family which emphasises his disbelief that they are dead. Repetition of "all" further highlights his disbelief.
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- use of rhetorical questions emphasise disbelief.
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"Out, damned spot!"
Act 5 Scene 1
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Lady Macbeth tries to wash imaginary blood of her hands - she is plagued by guilt. Contrast Act 2 scene 2 when she tells Macbeth "A little water clears us off this dead"
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Lady Macbeth Goes Mad- Language Changes
Act 5 Scene 1
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Her speech changes from Blank Verse (regular rhythm of iambic pentameter) to broken prose. This represents her broken state of mind and change of behaviour.