Macbeth quotes

    Cards (93)

    • fair is foul and foul is fair
      Act 1, Scene 1 - Witches - paradox - supernatural
    • O valiant cousin, worthy gentleman

      Act 1, Scene 2 - Duncan - bloodshed is revelled in - brutality a virtue
    • So foul and fair a day I have not seen
      Act 1, Scene 3 - Macbeth - opening line - paradox similar to witches - potential for supernaturalness
    • You should be women, And yet your beards forbid me to interpret that you are so

      Act 1, Scene 3- Macbeth - Witches = supernatural and transgressive of gender
    • Thou shalt get Kings, though thou be none
      Act 1, Scene 3 - Third Witch - prophecy - Banquo
    • Why do you dress me in borrow'd robes?

      Act 1, Scene 3 - Macbeth to Ross - disbelief of prohpecy becoming true - theatrical imagery
    • The instruments of darkness tell us truths
      Act 1, Scene 3 - Banquo - less trustworthy of witches - calm and sceptical
    • Speak, I charge you!

      Act 1, Scene 3 - Macbeth - imperative - witches fail to obey - lack of control? - argues against supernatural powers
    • Stars hide your fires; let not light see my black and deep desires
      Act 1, Scene 4 - Macbeth (aside) -
    • Come you spirits that tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here
      Act 1, Scene 5 - Lady Macbeth - similar to witches - supernatural relations - transgression of gender - imperatives - urgency - desperation - recurrence of 'un': cannot undo actions
    • Come, thick night, and pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell
      Act 1, Scene 5 - Lady Macbeth - light/dark imagery - Hellish imagery - guilt - shroud for dead bodies - concealment - conspiracy - relates to Macbeth's 'Stars hide your fires...' - femme fatale
    • Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under't
      Act 1, Scene 5 - Lady Macbeth - religious imagery - Adam and Eve - sin against God - regicide - deception - conspiracy -transgressive femme fatale
    • Bloody instructions, which, being taught, return to plague th'inventor
      Act 1, Scene 7 - Macbeth - fears moral consequences - humility - psychological state
    • Vaulting ambition
      Act 1, Scene 7 - Gothic ambition - fatal flaw of tragic hero - only motive to kill - realises it is untrustworthy
    • There's husbandry in heaven; Their candles are all out

      Act 2, Scene 1 - Banquo - Religious imagery - dark imagery
    • Is this a dagger which I see before me

      Act 2, Scene 1 - Macbeth - visions - horror image - two interpretations: dagger of Macbeth's imagination OR conjured by the Witches to spur on Macbeth to kill Duncan - ambiguity of supernatural
    • I have thee not, and yet I see thee still

      Act 2, Scene 1 - Macbeth dagger soliloquy - contradictions like the Witches
    • Had he not resembled my father as he slept, I had done't
      Act 2, Scene 2 - Lady Macbeth - indicates she has some conscience - not purely evil
    • I could not say 'Amen'
      Act 2, Scene 2 - Macbeth - Amen means 'so be it' in Hebrew - cannot ask for anything given his sin - guilt
    • Macbeth shall sleep no more

      Act 2, Scene 2 - Macbeth thinks he heard a voice cry 'sleep no more!' - accepts danger of sleep when he is to be king - insomnia - erratic and tyrannical behaviour
    • The devil himself could not pronounce a title more hateful to mine ear

      Act 5, Scene 7 - Young Siward - religious imagery - hatred for Macbeth publicly known
    • This dead butcher and his fiend like queen

      Act 5, Scene 8 - Malcolm - butcher: someone who kills with no remorse or regret or reason - fiend - evil and immoral, capable of enchanting victims into a false sense of security
    • Out damned spot: out I say

      Act 5, Scene 1 - Lady Macbeth - sleepwalking scene - manifestation of Duncan's blood - guilt - madness - like madwoman in the attic in Jane Eyre and Lucy's inability to sleep in Dracula
    • Beware Macduff
      Act 4, Scene 1 - First apparition - possible threat of Macduff
    • None of woman born shall harm Macbeth

      Act 4, Scene 1 - Second apparition (Bloody child) - comforts Macbeth but has double meaning - Macduff born Caesarean - Macduff can kill him
    • Mother's womb untimely ripp'd
      Act 5, Scene 8 - Macduff confirming threat
    • until Great Birnham wood to high Dunsinane Hill shall come against him
      Act 4, Scene 1 - Third apparition (crowned child) - branches cut down and used as camouflage used by the English led by Siward and Malcolm, Duncan's son
    • Something wicked this way comes

      Act 4, Scene 1 - Second witch - their own creation - Macbeth now comes LOOKING FOR THEM - supernatural
    • When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in rain?

      Act 1, Scene 1 - First witch - Pathetic fallacy - connections to dark weather - dark imagery - supernatural - dark exposition - tragedy - conspiracy
    • secret, black, and midnight hags!

      Act 4, Scene 1 - Macbeth - arrogant command to the Witches - contrasts Act 1, Scene 3 where he addresses them with shock and surprise
    • We have scotch'd the snake, not killed it
      Act 3, Scene 2 - Macbeth - worried about threat (Banquo) - snake is the threat to his kinship - religious imagery - snake tempts
    • O, full of scorpions is my mind

      Act 3, Scene 2 - Macbeth - the fact Banquo and Fleance still live is like the sting of a scorpion
    • pun
      a joke exploiting the different possible meanings of a word or the fact that there are words that sound alike but have different meanings.
    • act
      a thing done; a deed
    • Tragedy
      an event causing great suffering, destruction, and distress, such as a serious accident, crime, or natural catastrophe.
    • Tragic hero

      a person of noble birth with heroic or potentially heroic qualities.
    • aside
      remark or passage by a character in a play that is intended to be heard by the audience but unheard by the other characters in the play.
    • Dialogue
      Conversation between characters
    • couplet
      two consecutive lines of poetry that rhyme
    • Personification
      A figure of speech in which an object or animal is given human feelings, thoughts, or attitudes