I don't know...can someone tell me?!! I know that the atmosphere in scene 1 is thunder and lightning, when the three witches make a complicated conversation with each other. uh.....duh??? you really have to read and annotate (mark passages that you think is important with connection to the theme as you go along reading). Anyway, you can find your answer in Act 1 Scene 3 line 40. A tip: get some colorful post-it notes to flag pages that you have annotated. Write a title on the exposed part of your post-it note so you can easily find that passage next time. It would help to highlight or underline those important passages while annotating it.
Sees as in she sees somthing and C's
The first thing Alice sees in her vision while she is in the hotel room is a ballet studio. Then she sees Bella's mom's living room.
Odysseus sees a bunch of random souls as soon as he prepares the offering( to get Tiresias to come up in the underworld to visit him and tell him his future) Odysseus sees his mom, Anticeleia, he sees as well Achilles, Ajax, Agamemnon, and of course Tiresias.
Pessimist is a person who habitually sees the worst side of things to come..The oposite of the pessimist is the optimist, a person who sees/ expects the best side of things to come.
Of course he is. He knows a sexy man when he sees him. First Obama: "young, handsome and even tanned" Then Rasmussen: "the most handsome prime minister in Europe". But still closeted, alas: "...introduce him to my wife"
The last thing he sees is Banquo and all his royal descendants. Well, he asked for it.
He asked for it. ("Shall Banquo's issue ever reign in this kingdom?") The witches even tried to talk him out of it ("Seek to know no more") but he insists ("Deny me this and an eternal curse fall on you.")
Because Macbeth is planning to kill Banquo and Fleance. Banquo states that none of Macbeth's family would be next in line for King but his family will. Macbeth sees the three witches to check that what Banquo was saying is correct.
*Banquo. Macbeth's best friend is Banquo, but he is also Macbeth's enemy. After the meeting with the witches, Macbeth finds out that he will become the Thane of Cawdor and the King of Scotland. Eventually, he achieves both of these prophecies. Banquo, Macbeth, and Lady Macbeth are the only people that know about the witches. Banquo becomes suspicious of Macbeth because Macbeth fulfills the prophecy after King Duncan is murdered, and Macbeth acknowledges this fact. Basically, Macbeth doesn't trust Banquo.
Macbeth sees the ghost of the recently murdered Banquo.
In Act 3 of William Shakespeare's "Macbeth," Macbeth's worst enemy is arguably Banquo. Macbeth sees Banquo as a threat to his newly gained power because of the witches' prophecy that Banquo's descendants will inherit the throne. Macbeth becomes obsessed with eliminating this potential threat, leading to Banquo's murder.
The prophecy is that Macbeth will become the Thane of Cawdor and then the King of Scotland. But Banquo's son, Fleance will become the next king after Macbeth. Banquo and Macbeth think the prophecy is ridiculous until Macbeth become Thane of Cawdor because the last Thane of Cawdor was tratior as he sided with the Norwegian Vikings during battle. The next Thane of Cawdor will be the ultamite tratior as he will kill the king to become King.
We are never really sure of how the witches relate to Macbeth. Do they merely foretell? Or are they controlling the lives of Macbeth and his wife? Before the play was revised and the character Hecate added (probably by the excellent playwright Thomas Middleton), the play was really ambiguous on this point.
banquo's
A friend could be defined as the individual who could be counted on for advice and support. In the Shakespearean play, Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] had two close friends. One was Banquo, with whom he worked as General in the King's Army. Banquo was the closest friend to the brave, noble side of Macbeth's split personality. The other friend was Macbeth's Lady [b. c. 1015], with whom he managed his household and his possessions. Lady Macbeth was the closest friend to the ambitious, unscrupulous side of Macbeth's split personality.
He does not call the ghost that appears at his supper-table that, but he does use the word to describe the image of Banquo conjured up by the witches, who proudly displays the line of kings descended from him. "Boltered" is a very obscure Warwickshire term which could only possibly be used by someone who grew up there, and means "grimy", "smeared", or, of hair "clotted" or "matted". See attached link.
Macbeth wants Banquo dead because Banquo witnessed what the three witches said. The three witches stated that Macbeth would one day become king. Now that Macbeth has become king, and done so by taking the life of the previous King Duncan, he fears that Banquo will spread the word that Macbeth was the one to commit the murder.