It is "foul" because of the battle being bloody and "fair" because they won with no tricks being made.
The most famous line in Macbeth is when Lady Macbeth says, "Out out damned spot." She says this line after she persuades Macbeth to kill the king. She feels guilty and imagines that she can't get the blood off of her hands.
In Act 1, Scene 1 of Shakespeare's "Macbeth," the witches famously declare, "Fair is foul, and foul is fair." This paradoxical statement reflects the theme of moral ambiguity and the deceptive nature of appearances throughout the play. The witches' proclamation sets the tone for the play's exploration of the blurred lines between good and evil, beauty and ugliness, and truth and falsehood. Macbeth himself later echoes this sentiment in Act 1, Scene 3, when he says, "So foul and fair a day I have not seen," suggesting his own internal conflict and the twisted nature of his reality.
In Macbeth's first line, he echoes the witches' paradoxical line "Fair is foul, and foul is fair" by stating "So foul and fair a day I have not seen." This creates a parallel between Macbeth's fate and the supernatural forces at play, suggesting that what seems fair or good may actually be foul or evil, and vice versa. The use of paradox in both instances foreshadows the themes of deception and moral ambiguity throughout the play.
What is significant is that it echoes the witches' line "Fair is foul and foul is fair; hover through the fog and filthy air", thus connecting Macbeth with the witches and showing how they anticipate what will happen to him. And of course both quotations talk about the moral ambiguity of what is and what seems to be in the play.
"Macbeth" is full of unusual, shifting ambiguous words: it really is a play in which, as Macbeth himself says,...Nothing isBut what is notIt's one of Shakespeare's shortest plays and yet each line is packed with meaning which both looks forward and backward in the play.You're right to pick up on "Fair is foul..." and there's lots of things to say about it. Like the quote I've given above, it's very difficult to tease out the precise sense: it's sort of self-cancelling (or self-affirming, depending on whether you think "fair" is both "fair" and "foul", or neither...), Macbeth currently appears "fair" (he's won "golden opinions" from all kinds of people") but will soon become "foul". The witches' prophecies sound "so fair", as Banquo says, but have another "foul" undercurrent."Fair", as Banquo's line "Why do you start and seem to fear / things that do sound so fair" points up, is also a close relation of "fear", and aural echoes in lines are also an important part of the paradoxical, juxtapositions of this play. Look at the way "I'll do and I'll do and I'll do" becomes Macbeth's "If 'twere done when tis done then 'twere best it were done quickly".It's a play where you never know whether Macbeth is acting freely, or under evil influence. You never quite know what anything means. Nothing is - but what is not.
It is most often used to foreshadow coming events. An excellent example of nature reflecting both natural and supernatural events that foreshadow what is to come are found in William Shakespeare's Macbeth. The play opens with three witches who are together during a dark and tempestuous storm with thunder and lightning. The are discussing the events to come and speak of Macbeth. When one of the weird sisters asks the others when they will meet again the response is when "fair is foul." That fair is foul turns out to be after Macbeth is victorious over the rebel the Thane of Cowdor. Macbeth and Banquo are riding home and it is raining, yet the sun is shining and Macbeth comments on this with the line "Such fair and foul a day I have not seen." The imagery of this line works in many ways. It is rare that the sun shines when it rains but also he has just defeated the Thane of Cowdor which took a heavy toll on his own men, thus fair and foul could be in reference to that, the weather only accentuating the day. It is, most importantly a foreshadowing of what is to come when the fair Macbeth turns foul and murders the King Duncan. thank you but i mean what's the term called, not what its for (i think its human falliacy or something?)
In Macbeth, a "filthy witness" refers to someone who has seen or knows about a crime or wrongdoing. This term reflects the idea that the witness's testimony or knowledge is tainted or corrupt due to the nature of the events they have witnessed.
May be she has seen you you with somebody/somewhere
She has seen a new side of you that she does not like.
When some says that it is all the same they mean that it is not surprising. These people have seen similar situations.
I have one pair of Macbeth size 14s. They are velcro. I have never seen another pair.
this is the dumbest question ive ever seen