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Presentation transcript:

Give me 3 details about this quote: @Ccmmoorriiss

Give me 3 details about this quote: These are Duncan’s words It is about the Macbeth’s castle. He is about to enter to stay the night. It is full of dramatic irony as the audience know they plan to kill him It is spoken on the eve of his murder

CONTEXT Macbeth, written in the Elizabethan era, dealt with some of the main concerns of the age – treachery, witchcraft and the unity of England and Scotland. Macbeth, written in the Jacobean era, dealt with some of the main concerns of the age – treachery, witchcraft and disease. Macbeth, written in the Jacobean era, dealt with some of the main concerns of the age – treachery, witchcraft and the unity of Ireland and Scotland. Macbeth, written in the Jacobean era, dealt with some of the main concerns of the age – treachery, witchcraft and the unity of England and Scotland.

CONTEXT Macbeth, written in the Elizabethan era, dealt with some of the main concerns of the age – treachery, witchcraft and the unity of England and Scotland. Macbeth, written in the Jacobean era, dealt with some of the main concerns of the age – treachery, witchcraft and disease. Macbeth, written in the Jacobean era, dealt with some of the main concerns of the age – treachery, witchcraft and the unity of Ireland and Scotland. Macbeth, written in the Jacobean era, dealt with some of the main concerns of the age – treachery, witchcraft and the unity of England and Scotland.

Give me 3 details about this quote: @Ccmmoorriiss

Give me 3 details about this quote: It is Lennox who says this It is about Macbeth The country is Scotland It is because Macbeth is murdering any ‘traitors’ Lennox has to be very careful in what he says.

MACBETH Macbeth is first introduced as a brave and ________ warrior. He has been trained to kill any enemy that threatens his King and country. Shakespeare introduces Macbeth in this way to create a sense of ___________ irony and _____________ the violence later in the play, at his hands. It becomes _________ early on in the play that Macbeth’s __________ is both his love and loyalty to Lady Macbeth and his own _______. In the moments after the murder, unlike his wife, Macbeth is plagued by feelings of guilt and ________ over the killing of Duncan. This _________ moment in the play, marks the beginning of his descent in _________ and madness. pivotal hamartia remorse apparent dramatic fierce turmoil hubris foreshadow

MACBETH Macbeth is first introduced as a brave and fierce warrior. He has been trained to kill any enemy that threatens his King and country. Shakespeare introduces Macbeth in this way to create a sense of dramatic irony and foreshadow the violence later in the play at his hands. It becomes apparent early on in the play that Macbeth’s hamartia is both his love and loyalty to Lady Macbeth and his own hubris. In the moments after the murder, unlike his wife, Macbeth is plagued by feelings of guilt and remorse over the killing of Duncan. This pivotal moment in the play, marks the beginning of his descent in turmoil and madness. pivotal hamartia remorse apparent dramatic fierce turmoil hubris foreshadow

Give me 3 details about this quote: @Ccmmoorriiss

Give me 3 details about this quote: It is Lady Macbeth who says this She is referring to when Macbeth first contemplated murdering Duncan It is a persuasive device to emasculate Macbeth, suggesting he is a coward Her persuasion is successful

IS THIS A DAGGER…. Is this a dagger which I see ________me, The handle toward my hand? Come, let me ________thee. I have thee not, and yet I see thee still. Art thou not, _______vision, sensible To feeling as to sight? or art thou but A dagger of the _______, a false creation, Proceeding from the heat-oppressed _______ ? I see thee yet, in form as palpable As this which now I draw. Thou marshall’st me the way that I was going And such an instrument I was to use. Mine eyes are made the fools of the other senses: Or else worth all the rest; I still ________ still. And on thy blade and dudgeon gouts of blood Which was not so before.

IS THIS A DAGGER…. Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? Come, let me clutch thee. I have thee not, and yet I see thee still. Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling as to sight? or art thou but A dagger of the mind , a false creation, Proceeding from the heat-oppressed brain ? I see thee yet, in form as palpable As this which now I draw. Thou marshall’st me the way that I was going And such an instrument I was to use. Mine eyes are made the fools of the other senses: Or else worth all the rest; I still thee still. And on thy blade and dudgeon gouts of blood Which was not so before.

DUNCAN You have minute to include all of these words in a quick fire explanation of Duncan: kind betrayed naive judge of character Cawdor God guest ‘pleasant seat’ ‘my father’ chamberlains

Give me 3 details about this quote: @Ccmmoorriiss

Give me 3 details about this quote: It is Macbeth who says this as an aside He is calling on the stars to go out so that his desire is not seen. His desire is to become king and kill Duncan so that this is possible His desire is his harmartia

Religious allusion (a reference to a well known religious story) GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF Dramatic Irony (When the audience are aware of something but some of the characters are not) Paradox (things being both true and untrue at the same time, a self-contradictory statement) Religious allusion (a reference to a well known religious story) Shared lines & broken meter (characters sharing the meter of the line and deliberately breaking the rhythm) Personification (giving a non-human thing human qualities - clue ‘murder’)

GIVE AN EXAMPLE OF Dramatic Irony (When the audience are aware of something but some of the characters are not) Duncan’s arrival to the Macbeth castle, Macbeth being named Thane of Cawdor Paradox (things being both true and untrue at the same time, a self-contradictory statement) ‘Fair is foul and foul is fair’ ‘Banquo lesser than Macbeth and much greater’ ‘No man of woman born’ Religious allusion (a reference to a well known religious story) ‘Look like the innocent flower but be the serpent uner’t’ Shared lines & broken meter (characters sharing the meter of the line and deliberately breaking the rhythm) ‘when?’ ‘Now.’ ‘As I descended?’ ‘Ay.’ ‘Hark!’ Personification (giving a non-human thing human qualities - clue ‘murder’) ‘Wither’d murder…moves like a ghost’

Give me 3 details about this quote: @Ccmmoorriiss

Give me 3 details about this quote: It is Macbeth who says this. It is just after he hears the news of Lady Macbeth’s death. He is commenting on how meaningless and hopeless life is It also suggests the supernatural and the link between life and death

MACBETH You have minute to include all of these words in a quick fire explanation of Macbeth warrior loyal hubris devoted husband manipulated murder hamartia trauma natural order & balance ‘done’

Give me 3 details about this quote: @Ccmmoorriiss

Give me 3 details about this quote: It is Lady Macbeth who says this It is immediately after the murder of Duncan. Macbeth thinks all the water in Neptune’s ocean will not clean his hands of Duncan’s blood. Lady Macbeth is frustrated by Macbeth.

LADY MACBETH You have minute to include all of these words in a quick fire explanation of Lady Macbeth: Ambitious hamartia Jacobean times evil manipulative calculating future in the present Relationship with Macbeth madness death

‘To be _____ is nothing but to be _______ thus’ spoken by ________ COMPLETE THE QUOTES & STATEMENTS ‘Look like the ______ ______ , but be the _______ under’t’ spoken by _________ to Macbeth ‘Fill me from the ______ to the toe, top full of _________ cruelty’ spoken by ____________ ‘I have no spur to prick the sides of my intent, but only ________ ambition which ______ itself’ spoken by ________ ‘To be _____ is nothing but to be _______ thus’ spoken by ________ ‘O full of _________ is my mind dearest wife’

‘To be thus is nothing but to be safely thus’ spoken by Macbeth COMPLETE THE QUOTES & STATEMENTS ‘Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under’t’ spoken by Lady Macbeth to Macbeth ‘Fill me from the crown to the toe, top full of direst cruelty’ spoken by Lady Macbeth ‘I have no spur to prick the sides of my intent, but only vaulting ambition which o’erleaps itself’ spoken by Macbeth ‘To be thus is nothing but to be safely thus’ spoken by Macbeth ‘O full of scorpions is my mind dearest wife’

Give me 3 details about this quote: @Ccmmoorriiss

Give me 3 details about this quote: It is the witches who say this about Macbeth It is moments before Macbeth goes to see them He wants to find out what his future holds The line suggests the ambiguity of who or what is ‘evil’ in the play.

THE WITCHES You have minute to include all of these words in a quick fire explanation of The Witches: King James treason natural world supernatural world words vs action link to Lady Macbeth evil equivocation imaginary world vs real world Paradox