In Act 3 Scene 2 Lines 45-46, Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] said, 'Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest chuck,/Till thou applaud the deed'. He made this statement to his wife [b. c. 1015] in reference to the murderous fate in store for Banquo and Banquo's son Fleance. The significance of the statement was Macbeth's planning something heinous on his own, without his usual collaboration from start to finish with Lady Macbeth.
( Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest chuck,/ till thou applaud the dead.) from apex
Macbeth is hiding his plan to kill Banquo from his wife. He thinks it will make a nice surprise for her: "Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest Chuck, 'till thou applaud the deed." As much as I have often thought so, this line does not show that Lady Macbeth's given name is Charles.
Macbeth is saying this as he thinks aloud about his plan to kill banquo and his son fleance. Lady Macbeth over hears and asks him about it. He asks her to be innocent of the knowledge but to not worry because once the deed is done she will be better off.
From this moment/The very firstlings of my heart shall be/The firstlings of my hand.
The "greatness" is only predicted; it has not yet happened. Yet Macbeth is certain that it will happen, that he will be crowned without his stir.
In this passage, Macbeth is telling Lady Macbeth to remain ignorant of his plan to kill King Duncan until after the act is done and she can show approval and praise for it. He wants her to remain innocent of the knowledge of their murderous plot until it is accomplished.
( Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest chuck,/ till thou applaud the dead.) from apex
Macbeth is hiding his plan to kill Banquo from his wife. He thinks it will make a nice surprise for her: "Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest Chuck, 'till thou applaud the deed." As much as I have often thought so, this line does not show that Lady Macbeth's given name is Charles.
Macbeth is saying this as he thinks aloud about his plan to kill banquo and his son fleance. Lady Macbeth over hears and asks him about it. He asks her to be innocent of the knowledge but to not worry because once the deed is done she will be better off.
From this moment/The very firstlings of my heart shall be/The firstlings of my hand.
The first statement means to remain unaware of the deed that you hold dearly until it gets approved. The second statement advises to maintain a calm and pleasant demeanor despite any internal turmoil or troubles, and to be cheerful and lively around guests.
The "greatness" is only predicted; it has not yet happened. Yet Macbeth is certain that it will happen, that he will be crowned without his stir.
After Duncan's murder, Macbeth becomes anxious and guilt-ridden, while Lady Macbeth remains calm and pragmatic. Macbeth is overwhelmed with guilt and begins to hallucinate, while Lady Macbeth reassures him and takes control of the situation by trying to cover up the crime and frame the guards for the murder.
After MacBeth receives the predictions from the witches he writes a letter to Lady MacBeth detailing the whole situation. He calls her his "dearest partner of greatness" and is very trusting of her. He is also subject to much influence from her since she is the one who later convinces MacBeth to kill the king, Duncan, when he is resolute on not doing anything of the sort.
The change starts in Act II with the words "Oh, I do repent that I killed them." When she hears that, Lady Macbeth realises that it is not done when 'tis done, but that there are future consequences, resulting in more death and a change in her husband. Before that point she was in control and was telling Macbeth what to do; now he is going off killing people without consulting her. And it gets worse. By Act III her husband is refusing to tell her what is going on: "Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest chuck." Macbeth is out of her control, and just plain out of control. At the dinner party he says enough to make her fear that everyone will see his guilt, which is also her guilt, since she started him off on this nightmare journey. She is the queen, which was what she desired, but now finds that "Desire's had without content". Unsatisfied with what she has and terrified of what Macbeth has become, she is already walking through her life like a sleepwalker, with no hope.
Macbeth doesn't tell his wife that he is killing Fleance and Banquo because she has already shown signs of cracking under the strain of the guilty secret of Duncan's murder. For her sake, he is not going to discuss the details of the crime with her. However, he does expect her to "applaud the deed" when she hears what he has done.
I think it means dearest from dearest...part of someone dearest in your life