( Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest chuck,/ till thou applaud the dead.) from apex
What lines support the idea that Macbeth does not want to tell his wife about Banquo's murder until after it has been done?
The person with the most lines in the play is macbeth
In persuading the two murders to murder Banquo, Macbeth repeatedly compares them to dogs. See Act 3, Scene 1, lines 91-107. Also, there are many uses of birds in metaphors.
She pressures him, using intense psychological pressure, to commit the murder which otherwise he would never have done. Review Act 1 Scene 7. On his own, Macbeth reaches the decision not to kill Duncan. He says, "We shall proceed no further in this business." Lady M then comes in, and by casting aspersions on his masculinity and other emotional tricks, causes him to make a 180 degree turn in the matter of a few lines. Macbeth is the one who uses the daggers, but Lady Macbeth is 100% the guiding mind and will behind the murder.
The Comedy of Errors, The Tempest and Macbeth in that order.
Macbeth says hardly anything, and what he says he says without flowery poetry. Lady Macbeth is excited, enthusiastic, and poetic. Moreover, she is the one in charge. "You shall put this night's great business into my dispatch" she tells him. She is the one who has planned and intends to carry out the murder; Macbeth has evinced no such intent.
In Act 2, Scene 3 of Macbeth, Banquo expresses his unease and suspicions about the witches' prophecies coming true for Macbeth. He also reveals his belief that Macbeth may have had a hand in King Duncan's murder. Banquo's response reflects his growing concern about Macbeth's actions and the potential consequences of the supernatural elements at play.
The person with the most lines in the play is macbeth
The sense of sight is appealed to in these lines from Macbeth.
In persuading the two murders to murder Banquo, Macbeth repeatedly compares them to dogs. See Act 3, Scene 1, lines 91-107. Also, there are many uses of birds in metaphors.
"Macbeth" by William Shakespeare has a total of 2,105 lines.
She pressures him, using intense psychological pressure, to commit the murder which otherwise he would never have done. Review Act 1 Scene 7. On his own, Macbeth reaches the decision not to kill Duncan. He says, "We shall proceed no further in this business." Lady M then comes in, and by casting aspersions on his masculinity and other emotional tricks, causes him to make a 180 degree turn in the matter of a few lines. Macbeth is the one who uses the daggers, but Lady Macbeth is 100% the guiding mind and will behind the murder.
Lady Macbeth speaks these lines in response to Macbeth's guilt over murdering King Duncan. She urges him to wash away the evidence of the murder from his hands and tries to calm his anxious thoughts by dismissing them as irrational. Lady Macbeth brings the daggers used in the murder as evidence of Macbeth's involvement in the deed.
The Comedy of Errors, The Tempest and Macbeth in that order.
Macbeth himself suspects his own actions and intentions. In Act II, after he murders King Duncan, Macbeth starts to feel overwhelming guilt and paranoia. He hears a voice that says, "Macbeth shall sleep no more" and he becomes consumed by fear and guilt, indicating his inner suspicion.
In Act 1, Scene 3, the witches proclaim "All hail, Macbeth, that shalt be king hereafter!" This foreshadows Macbeth's ambition to become king. Additionally, Lady Macbeth's line in Act 1, Scene 5, "Glamis thou art, and Cawdor; and shalt be / What thou art promised," hints at Macbeth's eventual role in the murder of King Duncan to fulfill the prophecy.
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One example of foreshadowing in Macbeth is when the witches chant, "Fair is foul, and foul is fair" in Act 1, Scene 1. This line suggests that things are not as they seem and sets the tone for the deception and ambiguity that surrounds the characters and events in the play.