Old man says Last Tuesday a hawk flying high in the air was attacked and killed by an owl hunting mice.
"A falcon towering in her pride of place was by a mousing owl hawked and killed" SCENE IV line 13
Ross.Duncan's horses, beautiful and swift, the best of their kind, broke down their stalls and ran wild. They refused to obey, as if they were at war with mankind.
"turned wild in nature, borke their stalls, flung out, contending'gainst obedience"
Since you don't say which of the five acts you are talking about, it could be any of the strange occurrences which are reported in the play (I am not including the strange occurrences which are actually played out on stage like witches making a weird potion or ghosts sitting in at the supper table): horses eating each other, a forest which moves, a man hearing a disembodied voice saying 'Sleep no more!", a woman that writes letters in her sleep, a king that cures sick people by touching them or a man incapable of saying the word "Amen", to name a few.
You don't say what Act but I'm guessing Act II with the air-drawn dagger, the voice saying "Sleep no more", Duncan's horses which eat each other, and the wind blowing down chimneys. There is also the witches in Act I who disappear into thin air, a ghost in Act III, more witches in Act IV, and an army camouflaged with a moving forest in Act V.
Chimneys being blown down, cannibal horses
The pathetic fallacy, the idea that the universe mirrors the moral or emotional state of the characters in the drama.
Why do you think Macbeth is startled by the witches prediction's in act 1 of Macbeth by Shakespeare
In Act 3 Scene 1 Macbeth says: "We hear our bloody cousins are bestow'd In England and in Ireland, not confessing Their cruel parricide, filling their hearers With strange invention" Presumably, Duncan's sons are suggesting that Macbeth killed Duncan, not them.
Lady Macbeth totally sucks Macbeth's dick right now.
Lady Macbeth
The murder takes place offstage, after the end of Act II Scene I but before Macbeth re-enters near the beginning of Scene II. If the action is viewed as being continuous, it must be while Lady M is saying "That which hath made them drunk hath made me bold."
Why do you think Macbeth is startled by the witches prediction's in act 1 of Macbeth by Shakespeare
The Oracle of Delphi is still functioning when there are kings in Sicily and Bohemia. Some people land on the seacoast of Bohemia, a landlocked country. And a man is eaten by a bear.
The sailors wife munched on chestnuts in Shakespeare's play "Macbeth." It is mentioned in Act 1, Scene 3 during a conversation about supernatural occurrences.
In Act 3 Scene 1 Macbeth says: "We hear our bloody cousins are bestow'd In England and in Ireland, not confessing Their cruel parricide, filling their hearers With strange invention" Presumably, Duncan's sons are suggesting that Macbeth killed Duncan, not them.
In Act III Scene 6 of Macbeth, the Scottish noblemen from England are Lennox and Caithness. They discuss the strange occurrences in Scotland and express their concerns about Macbeth's rule. These characters provide an outsider's perspective on the deteriorating situation in Scotland under Macbeth's tyrannical leadership.
"Stars, hide your fires; let not light see my black and deep desires." - Macbeth, Act 1, Scene 4. This quote indicates that Macbeth struggles to conceal his ambitious and murderous thoughts, suggesting that he is not adept at hiding his emotions.
The messenger reported that Birnam Wood appears to be moving towards Dunsinane Hill, echoing the witches' prophecy that Macbeth would be defeated when Birnam Wood comes to Dunsinane. This news fills Macbeth with fear and confirms that his downfall is approaching.
Lady Macbeth totally sucks Macbeth's dick right now.
Young Siward is the first to fight Macbeth in Act V. Macbeth kills young Siward.
Lady Macbeth
The murder takes place offstage, after the end of Act II Scene I but before Macbeth re-enters near the beginning of Scene II. If the action is viewed as being continuous, it must be while Lady M is saying "That which hath made them drunk hath made me bold."
In Act 2 of Macbeth, King Duncan is murdered by Macbeth in his sleep. Lady Macbeth also kills the two sleeping guards to frame them for the murder.