Whom does Macbeth have murdered to keep one of the witches' prophecies from coming true?
He kills Banquo to thwart the prophecy about Banquo's issue becoming kings, but it doesn't work because Fleance escapes. He kills Macduff's family because of the warning to "Beware Macduff" but it doesn't work because Macduff escapes. Both times he kills the wrong person or people.
What would be some good headlines for scenes 1-7 in act 1 of Macbeth?
Scene 1: STRANGE WOMEN SEEN ON HEATHScene 2: SCOTS WIN BATTLE AT FORRES; MACBETH TO BE REWARDEDScene 3: WANDERING FORTUNE TELLERS GREET GENERALSScene 4: MALCOLM APPOINTED PRINCE OF CUMBERLAND; MACBETH UNHAPPYScene 5: LADY MACBETH PRAYS FOR HELP AS KING APPROACHES INVERNESSScene 6: KING DUNCAN ARRIVES AT INVERNESSScene 7: MACBETH DEBATES FUTURE AT DINNER PARTY
How does Macduff's line 'Fit to govern no not live' reflect the concept of monarchy in Macbeth?
According to this line, a monarch is not entitled to govern merely by birth, but only by the virtue of his actions. Monarchy should be a meritocracy; there is no divine right to rule. This is why it is legitimate to overthrow Macbeth.
Who did Macbeth kill the same night he killed Duncan?
Nobody, unless you count the voice that said that Macbeth had murdered sleep. He did kill the two grooms, but not until the next morning.
What comments does Hecate make that suggest Macbeth had free will?
Hecate is a totally unnecessary character in the play and most scholars believe that she was added to Shakespeare's play afterward by another author, probably Thomas Middleton. Most of what she says is in Act III Scene 5. Since the whole tenor of the speech is that Macbeth will be made to feel secure so as to doom himself, since "you all know security is mortals' chiefest enemy.", the idea is to control Macbeth and make him a puppet. Free Will doesn't enter into it. However she does say, "all you have done hath been but for a wayward son, spiteful and wrathful, who, as others do, loves for his own ends, not for you." Her view is that Macbeth is selfish. This would not really be inconsistent with his having no free will, but some might look at it like that.
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.
Re-Read Scene 6 lines 10-31 Compare and contrast the words of King Duncan and those of Lady Macbeth?
Duncan is so full of himself. His first line complains that those that love him are sometimes annoying, "sometime is our trouble", which he graciously thanks as love anyway. Then he says, "Herein I teach you how you shall bid God yield us for your pains, and thank us for your trouble." He says he will teach them to thank him when he makes a nuisance of himself, and more, how they should thank God and pray that God should glorify him, Duncan, when they suffer. Lady Macbeth replies graciously that the trouble they have gone to isn't the fourth part of the Honour the king brings to their house by visiting it. She is gracious and if it sounds insincere, he does not notice it because she is supposed to give him this kind of insincere flattery.
What are the witches predictions for Macbeth?
The three "predictions" uttered by the witches in Act I Scene 3 of Macbeth are: 1. He is Thane of Glamis (he already knows this), 2. He is Thane of Cawdor (this is true although he knows nothing about it or even about the battle where Cawdor was revealed to be a traitor.) 3. He will be King (This is the only real prediction since it is something which will happen in the future.)
What happens at the ambush Macbeth?
Is it really that hard to read it yourself?
Basically, in Act 2 Macbeth kills Duncan, Malcolm and Macduff flee and Macbeth is crowned King of Scotland at the very end.
What does 'seeds of time and say which grain will grow' from Macbeth mean?
In Act I Scene 3, the witches have appeared and have hailed Macbeth. Banquo is put out and says "What about meee?", although he puts it more nicely and less whiny. He says, "If you can look into the seeds of time and say which grain will grow and which will not, speak then to me." Looking at a handful of seeds and saying which ones will grow is a metaphor for predicting the future; the seeds become a metaphor for all the potential events, some of which will happen and some will not. It is a deeper and more powerful way of saying "predict the future".
Why does Macbeth bring the bloody dagger to lady Macbeth?
He has forgotten that he is holding it. He is in a state of shock and does not fully understand what he is doing.
Why is Macduff able to kill Macbeth?
He is the man not of woman born mentioned in the witches' prophecy, which is why they warned him to "beware Macduff". He is not born of woman because he was delivered by C-section. Apparently in order to be born you need to be born in the natural way.
What does Macbeth mean by why do you dress me in borrowed robes?
He has been called Thane of Cawdor. But as far as Macbeth knows, the Thane of Cawdor is a "prosperous gentleman"; he is not aware of the events in Fife described by Ross in the previous scene where the Thane of Cawdor was revealed to be a traitor and captured by some other Scottish hero. The word "robe" here is a metaphor for a title. Macbeth asks why they are calling him by someone else's title, like dressing him in someone else's clothes.
Macbeth and angus borrowed robes?
"Borrowed robes" is a phrase used by Macbeth in Act I Scene 3 to describe being hailed by someone else's title. Angus has nothing to do with it, although he does use the phrase "giant's robe" in Act V. In both cases, a "robe" is a metaphor for a title.
How does lady Macbeth respond to his fit?
She tells him to buck up and act like a man. But where telling him to act like a man used to work just fine to get him to behave as she wishes, she finds to her horror that it doesn't work any more.
How does banquo's reaction to the witches differ from Macbeth?
The witches address Macbeth first, and so Banquo says "But what about meeee? Tell meeee a prophecy." And so they do, but it is a prophecy which will not take place in Banquo's lifetime. He will not be around to see any of his descendants crowned. So he doesn't care much about it. Macbeth's prediction, on the other hand, will have to come true in his lifetime or not at all. Macbeth is naturally more caught up in the possibility the prophecy raises.
What part does Lady Macbeth play in Macbeths decision to kill the king?
The crucial part. Without Lady Macbeth, this would have been Macbeth's final decision: "We will proceed no further in this business." Macbeth would never have killed Duncan unless Lady Macbeth had goaded him into it.
What are Macbeth arguments to himself against killing Duncan?
Duncan is his cousin. Duncan is his king. Duncan is his guest. If he murders Duncan, he invites others to murder him. Many people like Duncan for being a nice guy and will be angry when he is killed.
What does Macbeth's decision to have banquo and his son murdered reveal about Macbeth's character?
(Apex Learning) That he has become more comfortable with killing in order to keep his throne.
How do the interactions in act 5.2 and 5.3 further develop the character of macbeth?
Act V Scene 2 is a conversation among a number of Scottish Lords who have joined up with Malcolm. They do talk about Macbeth, but their remarks tell us more about them and why they left Scotland than about Macbeth himself. The suggestion is, however, that an increasing number of Scotsmen are unsatisfied with him as a king at this point. Scene 3 is more revealing, because we see Macbeth needlessly abusing one of his innocent servants, we hear him acknowledge that he is cursed (confirming the reports in the previous scene), putting on his armour and then taking it off, and dismissing the Doctor. His behaviour is so rude and erratic that the Doctor wants nothing better than to get out of there. But at the same time we see that Macbeth has acknowledged that all hope of any pleasure in life has gone, and yet he still hopes to find a cure for his wife's problems. He will lose the last vestiges of humanity when he hears of her death, the last human being for whom he has any feelings.
What was the position of women in society when Shakespeare wrote Macbeth?
Although women in the early seventeenth century would appear to have few rights when compared to British women of the twenty-first century, they were not actually as ill-used as women in some societies before or since. They were allowed freedom of movement around town, and if unmarried had the right to own their own property. Widows and unmarried women could and did own and run their own businesses, and could hire men as their servants. Married women were expected to run and manage their households, which was at that time a full-time job, and one which was not thought to be contemptible generally, since it was the equivalent to managing a small business. The latitude afforded to the eccentric transvestite Mary Frith shows that women had more freedom than people imagine.
Normally it is actors who are superstitious about naming the Scottish play in theatres, not members of the audience. If there is evidence that the audience feels bound by this superstition, it could mean one of the following:
What is the definition of the word knell In Macbeth?
"The bell invites me. Hear it not Duncan, for it is a knell which summons thee to heaven or to hell." A knell is the sound of a bell, in this case the signal bell which Lady M has rung. It has an especial connection with bells rung at funerals, which is appropriate under the circumstances.
Hath so exasperate the king that he prepares for some attempt of war what is Macbeth doing?
"The king" here is Macbeth. He is exasperated by the attempts of Malcolm to raise an army against him. Therefore he "prepares for some attempt of war", and what does it mean to prepare for war? To raise an army, train and arm soldiers, that sort of thing.