Macbeth Revision. May 2017 Paper Glamis thou art, and Cawdor, and shalt be extract Explore how Shakespeare presents ambition in Macbeth.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Macbeth Revision. May 2017 Paper Glamis thou art, and Cawdor, and shalt be extract Explore how Shakespeare presents ambition in Macbeth."

Transcription

1 Macbeth Revision AQA Specimen Paper 1 The raven himself is hoarse extract Explain how far you think Shakespeare presents Lady Macbeth as a powerful woman. AQA Specimen Paper 2 Bring me no more reports; let them fly all extract Explain how far you think Shakespeare presents Macbeth as a hero. May 2017 Paper Glamis thou art, and Cawdor, and shalt be extract Explore how Shakespeare presents ambition in Macbeth. AQA Specimen Paper 3 He has almost supped extract Explore how Shakespeare presents the marriage between Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. Duncan (1995) 1) Sons, kinsmen, thanes 2) set of sun 3) O valiant cousin! Worthy gentleman! 4) God save the king! 5) The sin of my ingratitude 6) There if I grow, the harvest is your own 7) signs of nobleness, like stars, shall shine 8) love, happiness, joy, 9) What bloody man is that? 10) plead like angels, trumpettongued poison'd chalice 11) resembled my father 12) 'Amen stuck in my throat 13) I'll gild the faces 14) golden opinions 15) Neptune's ocean wash this blood 16) The spring, the head, the fountain of your blood is stopp'd 17) By th' clock tis day, and yet dark night strangles 18) A falcon [was] by a mousing owl killed Witches (2013) 1) thunder and lightning 2) hurlyburly 3) When the battle s lost and won 4) set of sun 5) I ll do, I ll do, and I ll do 6) nine times nine 7) the charm s wound up 8) so wither d and so wild 9) look not like the inhabitants o the earth and yet are on t 10) chappy finger 11) skinny lip 12) you should be women and yet your beards forbid me to interpret that you are so 13) speak if you can 14) look into the seeds of time 15) wool of bat and tongue of dog 16) finger of birth-strangled babe 17) the charm is firm and good 18) by the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes 19) secret, black and midnight hags Banquo (1987) 1) True, worthy Banquo; he is full so valiant 2) the root and father of many 3) There is none but he whose being I do fear 4) There if I grow, the harvest is your own 5) the root and father of many 6) they hail'd him father to a line of 7) a fruitless crown 8) a barren sceptre 9) lesser than Macbeth, and greater 10) not so happy, yet much happier 11) seeds of time 12) thou will get 13) take my sword 14) enfold thee and hold thee to my heart 15) Thou hast it now: king, Cawdor, Glamis, all 16) set me up in hope 17) I fear, thou play'dst most foully for't Macduff (2014) 1) there s daggers in men s smiles 2) Turn, hell-hound, turn 3) knocking 4) all my pretty chickens? 5) dispute it like man 6) I will do so. But I must also feel it as a man 7) I have no words; my voice is in my sword 8) Your royal father is murdered 9) Is thy master stirring? 10) untimely ripped from his mother s womb 11) you dog from hell 12) Lord's anointed temple 14) he fail'd his presence at the tyrant's feast 15) beware Macduff 16) give to the edge o' the sword his wife, his babes 17) to leave his babes, his mansion he loves us not 18) Not in the legions of horrid hell can come a devil more damn'd in evils to top Macbeth

2 Critical theory: Duncan The idea of a king's divine right to rule gained leverage during the reign of King James I. In James I s The True Law of Free Monarchies (1598), he suggests that kings are higher beings who owe their kingship to the will of God. James I declared kings sit on God s throne in the earth. King James I describes any uprising against the king as monstrous and unnatural. It would be an uprising against the will of God. With Macbeth s death and Malcolm's ascension to the throne, the natural order is restored. The land can begin to heal itself under the guidance of a king who is capable of compassion and cares for his kingdom. In Greek mythology, if Themis (the divine or natural law) was ignored, then Nemesis (Goddess of Retribution) would spring into action. She punished those who committed hubris in rejecting divine law and order. In killing Duncan, both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth would immediately attract the attention of Nemesis. When Macbeth and Lady Macbeth murder Duncan, this act was a rebellion against God. It would be a perversion of the natural order. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth s perversion of nature is reflected throughout the play: in Lady Macbeth s unsex[ed] gender, in the sickness that attacks them both, and the uprising of the land (literally in the case of Burham Wood which uproots to Dunsinane ) to restore the natural order they upset. King James I wrote in The True Law of Free Monarchies that the relationship between the king and his subjects can be compared to the head of a body. The king symbolises the head and it should protect the body (his citizens) from all evil. Macbeth is unable to protect the land from evil because he is the root of all evil. After Duncan s death, the land begins to reflect evil through weird and supernatural events. Shakespeare notes that by th clock tis day and yet dark night strangles the sun. Shakespeare states a falcon [was] by a mousing owl killed and that Duncan s horses ate each other. The land is troubled with man s act. The land is shrouded in darkness after the set of sun. It becomes barren, no longer fertile and healthy; nothing can grow without the light of the sun or without the love of Duncan. Macbeth s infertility emphasises his lack of kingly nature. With the death of the rightful King Duncan, came the death of the sun. When Macbeth perverts nature and claims the throne, the land becomes sick as a result. Although referenced in Macbeth, the poisoned chalice predates this record by 1570 years. In Matthew 26, Jesus urges his disciples to drink from the cup for this is my blood. Although, at this point, Jesus knew he had been betrayed, King Duncan did not. However, just like Jesus, Duncan is a symbol of love and compassion. However, a parallel allusion is also made as both figures are fated to die a mortal and painful death. Roy Walker imagines the murder of Duncan as a symbol of the crucifixion of Christ. Macbeth symbolises Judas, and Duncan represents Christ. Shakespeare references another Golgotha. The battlefield to Golgotha was the place of Christ's death in the New Testament. An immediate Biblical allusion is made to Matthew 27 which extends upon the idea that Macbeth s murder of Duncan is just as great a deed as the death of Christ. The death of Duncan has just a great an impact on Scotland as the death of Christ had on the world. The murder of Duncan has also been likened to Cain's fratricide. Walter Curry believes the moral degradation of Macbeth follows an archetypal pattern exemplified by Lucifer and Adam within the Bible. Shakespeare compares a dead Duncan to a new Gorgon. Just like the fabled Medusa, the sight of the King's bloody corpse is so terrible it will destroy them. Yet, Medusa originally was a virgin temple maiden for the goddess Athena. She attracted the attention of Poseidon and was raped by him within the temple. Both Medusa and Duncan represented all that was once pure, but their lives became tainted by evil. Duncan s metaphorical rape stems from the phallic imagery of the daggers which Macbeth uses to penetrate Duncan s body. Interestingly, it is to Neptune (the Roman equivalent of Poseidon) to whom Macbeth begs his ocean s [to] wash this blood.

3 Critical theory: Witches Macbeth is punished for his desire for power. In The Wheel of Fire (1930), G. Wilson Knight states that the weird sisters personify the Greek Furies. These were the avengers of murder. The witches madden Macbeth with their apparitions and ghosts. Rather than being figures of evil, the witches punish Macbeth s violent actions. The witches represent the Greek Fates. Their Greek name, Moirai, comes from portion or that which is allotted to you. Boece (1527) states the weird sisters were goddesses of destiny. It was the role of the Greek Fates to fashion a life: one to spin the thread of life, one to measure it, and one to cut short the thread. Shakespeare amplifies the dangers of overreaching power and ambition through this link to Greek mythology. Macbeth/Lady Macbeth is punished by premature death. To defy the Fates was to bring Nemesis, the Goddess of Retribution who destroyed those who displayed hubris. In Matthew 26.49, Judas betrays Jesus for his own over overreaching ambition. Judas greets Jesus with Hail Master to identify Jesus to the Roman guards. The witches greet Macbeth with All hail. From the start of the play, Shakespeare emphasises the witches betrayal of Macbeth. However, whereas Judas deceived Jesus for power, the witches deceive Macbeth and punish his quest for power. The word weird from weird sisters stems from Old English. Wyrd means fate or destiny. It is predestined that Macbeth/Lady Macbeth s overreaching desire for power and ambition is punished by the three witches. Within Macbeth, the nobles speak in iambic pentameter and all other characters speak in prose. However, the witches speak in trochaic tetrameter. This style juxtaposes with the more natural prose. The heavy stresses give the witches speech a sense of foreboding. This emphasises their malevolence and unearthliness. Immediately, the witches are on the fringes of normal society not only through their beards, but also their manner of speech. Shakespeare deploys an untraditional stress pattern to present the witches as other and different. Binary oppositions are invoked within Macbeth: lost and won, fair and foul. Yet, they are subverted. The witches rupture heteronormativity. Banquo is unable to label these women as they look not like th' inhabitants o' th' Earth, and yet are on 't. Marilyn French believes the witches represent ambiguity. This gender ambiguity continues into Lady Macbeth and Macbeth s relationship. The witches challenge our assumptions about masculine and feminine attributes. Although not a secret, black, and midnight hag, Lady Macbeth is infamous for her role as the fourth witch. The witches subvert the natural order of religion and society, and Lady Macbeth subverts the order of gender and craves power. It was widely believed in Europe for centuries that sorcery could cause impotence. In the preface of Daemonologie, King James I believes witches were able to weaken the nature of some men. Macbeth infertility draws attention to Lady Macbeth s secret nature. It is also worth noting that the witches speak in numbers. The First Witch will make the sailor s torture last sev'n nights, nine times nine. The witches chant Thrice to thine, and thrice to mine. The First Witch repeats I ll do, I ll do, and I ll do. There are three witches. In Christianity, three represents the Holy Trinity: God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. Bad luck is frequently thought to come in threes. Macbeth is hailed by three titles (Thane of Glamis, Thane of Cawdor and King hereafter ) and is later given three prophecies. Nine is a multiple of three: therefore, nine and nine times nine multiplies and reinforces the power of the number three. Shakespeare suggesting that the Witches are an unholy trinity. In Shakespeare's primary source for Macbeth, Holinshed's Chronicles, the Weird Sisters are goddesses of destinee.

4 Critical theory: Banquo According to Jungian theory, Banquo would represent the wise old man. Banquo does not seek out power and is happy to let the seeds of time fall as they may. Even in a ghostly form, the character does not seek out revenge. The character is traditionally played as stolidly loyal, unmoved by the supernatural or by personal motivation. Banquo symbolises fertility. The witches predict thou will get. In Greek mythology, Demeter is the goddess of harvest and fertility. Shakespeare presents the seed of Banquo as being a catalyst of power. Shakespeare continuously emphasises the semantic field of harvest in association with Banquo: the root, if I grow, the harvest is your own. Shakespeare amplifies the presence of fertile Demeter in all allusions to this lesser yet greater character. Banquo s power lies in his seed. With regards to fertility, Banquo is Macbeth s juxtaposing doppelganger. Whereas Banquo is the root and father of many, Macbeth has a fruitless crown. Consequently, Macbeth states There is none but he whose being I do fear. Contextually, Elizabeth I held the throne before James I. She was the virgin queen who described herself as being a barren stock. Freud describes the play of Macbeth as mirroring the Tudor s curse of unfruitfulness. Shakespeare juxtaposes this with Banquo s fertile blessings of the Stuart line. The critic Maskell describes Banquo as Schelandre's paragon of valour and virtue. The royality of [Banquo s] nature flatters King James ancestry. The House of Stuart descended from the grandson of Fleance s daughter. Macbeth was insecure with regards to his friend and recognised in Banquo a kingly quality he did not possess himself. Banquo is the preferred servant of King Duncan who desires to enfold thee and hold thee to my heart. On greeting Macbeth, Duncan simply remarks welcome hither. Banquo and Duncan arrive at Macbeth s castle together, and Banquo delivers Duncan s hostess gift to Lady Macbeth. Shakespeare draws parallel allusions to Macbeth and Mark Antony, and Banquo and Caesar. Macbeth believes his genius will be destroyed as Mark Antony s was by Caesar. In Antony and Cleopatra, Antony asks the soothsayer Whose fortunes shall rise higher? with the answer being Caesar s. The angel who guides Caesar is weaker than the angel who guides Anthony. Similarly, Macbeth fears his angel will be overwhelmed by man they hail d father to a line of. Shakespeare borrowed the character of Banquo from Holinshed's Chronicles. In Chronicles, Banquo is an accomplice to Macbeth in the murder of the king. Shakespeare may have changed this aspect to please King James, a descendant of the real Banquo. Critics often interpret Banquo's role in the play as being a foil to Macbeth. Banquo resists evil where Macbeth embraces it. Coleridge saw the unpossessedness of Banquo s mind as an unsullied, unscarified mirror to Macbeth s villainy. Leighton believed that Banquo is far from noble. Banquo s motives are unclear, and some critics question his purity. Even though he suspects foul play in the death of Duncan, he does nothing to accuse Macbeth of murder. He believes Banquo drank in, as greedily as his partner, the prophecies of the weird tempters. However, he lacked Macbeth s prompt resolution to act. Also, Banquo lacks his own Lady Macbeth to stir him into action. Prior to being killed, Banquo demands Fleance to take my sword. Once again, phallic and fertile imagery is associated with Banquo. By passing on his sword to his son, Banquo is metaphorically passing on his seed to ensure the witches prophecy is fulfilled. Fleance s evasion of death spearheads the birth of James I.

5 Critical theory: Macduff Although not the eponym of the play, Macduff is a key player in both the rising action and resolution of Macbeth. The character is the first to discover Duncan s body. He is the man who kills Macbeth. Macduff is an avenging hero. After Duncan s death, the dark night strangles the sun. Shakespeare states a falcon [was] by a mousing owl killed and that Duncan s horses ate each other. James I declared kings sit on God s throne in the earth. King James I describes any uprising against the king as monstrous and unnatural. It would be an uprising against the will of God. By referring to Macbeth as a hell-hound, Shakespeare emphasises Macduff s full awareness that the natural order has been displaced and a dog from hell now sits on the Scottish throne. When Macduff knocks at the gate of Macbeth's castle, he is equated with the figure of Christ. The scene with the Porter parodies a text known as the Harrowing of Hell. Before Christ s ascension to heaven, Jesus demands entrance at the gates of hell. Yet, he is kept waiting by the Porter, Rybald, who takes his orders from Beelzebub. Shakespeare mirrors this scene and Macduff echoes the demands of Christ and is left knocking. The Harrowing of Hell marks the climax of the battle between God and Satan for the fate of humanity. Macbeth represents Beelzebub, one of the fallen angels in Milton's Paradise Lost. Once brave, he now channels the power of Satan. When Macduff finds out about the death of all [his] pretty chickens, Malcolm urges him to Dispute it like a man. Macduff's reply - I will do so. But I must also feel it as a man emphasises his sense of compassion. This emotion juxtaposes him completely with Macbeth s soulless response to his wife s suicide where he simply wishes there had been a time for grief. In the final combat between hero and anti-hero, Macduff cries out, I have no words; my voice is in my sword. It is his very wordlessness that contrasts with Macbeth's empty rhetoric. Likewise, when Macbeth informs Donalbain of his father s death, he states 'The spring, the head, the fountain of your blood / Is stopped'. The statement is wordy and Macbeth skirts around the point with euphemisms. Yet, when Macduff speaks to Donalbain, he is clear and to the point: Your royal father's murdered.' In Greek mythology, Athena is born from Zeus's forehead (as a result of him having swallowed her mother Metis) dressed in armour. Athena was the goddess of courage, justice and strength. Similarly, Macduff was ripp d from his mother s womb in contrast to Macbeth who carv d out his passage. Although Macduff s birth may connote weakness, the allusion to Athena demonstrates his immediate readiness for justice and battle. Due to a lack of medical advancement, Macduff s mother would have been already deceased, and the baby cut from her womb. Macduff was born not from a woman, but from a corpse. Julius Caesar was born by this procedure. Hence, the name Caesarean. Both figures are linked by their power and leadership. Macduff is granted the gift of penetration. He recognises there s daggers in men s smiles. At the start of the play, Shakespeare states that Macbeth will allow the prophecies to unfold without my stir. When Macduff greets the Porter he asks Is thy master stirring? Macduff knows Macbeth no longer waited for chance to crown him. Macbeth can see through the hellhound s façade of an innocent flower. Macduff has no personal ambition and thus has no desire to oust Duncan for his own advancement: he is the epitome of patriotism. Macduff views Duncan as the Lord's anointed temple. Duncan is the life o' the building. The idea of a king's divine right to rule gained leverage during the reign of King James I. In James I s The True Law of Free Monarchies (1598), he suggests that kings are higher beings who owe their kingship to the will of God. James I declared kings sit on God s throne in the earth.

Written in the early 17 th century during Shakespeare s Tragic Period. Tragedy: a literary work depicting serious events in which the main character,

Written in the early 17 th century during Shakespeare s Tragic Period. Tragedy: a literary work depicting serious events in which the main character, Written in the early 17 th century during Shakespeare s Tragic Period. Tragedy: a literary work depicting serious events in which the main character, who is often highranking and dignified, comes to an

More information

Shakespeare s views and values: THEMES, SYMBOLS AND MOTIFS

Shakespeare s views and values: THEMES, SYMBOLS AND MOTIFS Shakespeare s views and values: THEMES, SYMBOLS AND MOTIFS It is important to consider what statements Shakespeare is making about humanity through Macbeth. What views and values does he show through the

More information

Macbeth: Act 1. Sc 1 Three Witches plan to meet Macbeth. Fair is foul, and foul is fair.

Macbeth: Act 1. Sc 1 Three Witches plan to meet Macbeth. Fair is foul, and foul is fair. Macbeth: Act 1 Supernatural: the witches open the play and suggest an upset in the natural order with contradiction in their language. Equivocation: are the witches misleading Macbeth? a major theme in

More information

QOUTE 1 QOUTE 2 QOUTE 3 QOUTE 4 QOUTE 5 The Prince of. step which o'erleaps itself perfect. prophecies have come

QOUTE 1 QOUTE 2 QOUTE 3 QOUTE 4 QOUTE 5 The Prince of. step which o'erleaps itself perfect. prophecies have come Greed Supernatural - The witches create a supernatural QOUTE 1 QOUTE 2 QOUTE 3 QOUTE 4 QOUTE 5 The Prince of Glamis thou art, and To prick the sides of my Who wear our health Cumberland! that is a Cawdor,

More information

Macbeth. [Aside] If chance will have me king, why, chance may crown me, Without my stir. (1.3) What thou art promised: yet do I fear thy nature;

Macbeth. [Aside] If chance will have me king, why, chance may crown me, Without my stir. (1.3) What thou art promised: yet do I fear thy nature; Macbeth ACT 1 ALL SERGEANT Fair is foul, and foul is fair: Hover through the fog and filthy air. (1.1) brave Macbeth--well he deserves that name-- Disdaining fortune, with his brandish'd steel, Which smoked

More information

Act III, Sc. 3. Macbeth Macbeth, Witches, Banquo, Rosse, Angus

Act III, Sc. 3. Macbeth Macbeth, Witches, Banquo, Rosse, Angus , Witches, Banquo, Rosse, Angus Act III, Sc. 3 Thunder. Enter the three Witches. First Witch. Where hast thou been, sister? Sec. Witch. Killing swine. Third Witch. Sister, where thou? First Witch. A sailor

More information

MACBETH. GCSE Revision

MACBETH. GCSE Revision MACBETH GCSE Revision Learning Objectives: Recap the main events of the play Recap the characters and their role in the play Look at themes and motifs in the play Find important quotes Look at exam questions

More information

I was born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. I eventually moved to London, where I wrote over 38 plays and hundreds of poems. I died in 1616.

I was born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. I eventually moved to London, where I wrote over 38 plays and hundreds of poems. I died in 1616. I was born in 1564 in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. I eventually moved to London, where I wrote over 38 plays and hundreds of poems. I died in 1616. Comedies: All s Well That Ends Well As You Like It

More information

The bell invites me that summons thee to heaven or hell. As I descend.

The bell invites me that summons thee to heaven or hell. As I descend. Shall sleep neither night nor day. Macbeth shall sleep no more. Keep her from rest. Sleep is considered to be peace of mind. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth have no inner peace after the crimes they commit. This

More information

Act 1, Scene 1. Act 1, Scene 2

Act 1, Scene 1. Act 1, Scene 2 Act 1, Scene 1 [Thunder and lightning. Out of the foggy air come three ugly old women, dressed in black. They are witches] 1 st Witch: When shall we three meet again, In thunder, lightning, or in rain?

More information

Shakespeare paper: Macbeth

Shakespeare paper: Macbeth English test En KEY STAGE 3 LEVELS 4 7 2004 Shakespeare paper: Macbeth Please read this page, but do not open the booklet until your teacher tells you to start. Write your name, the name of your school

More information

BLANK PAGE. KS3/04/En/Levels 4 7/Macbeth 2

BLANK PAGE. KS3/04/En/Levels 4 7/Macbeth 2 BLANK PAGE KS3/04/En/Levels 4 7/Macbeth 2 Writing task You should spend about 30 minutes on this section. In Macbeth, Banquo warns Macbeth about the Witches influence. Help! You give advice in a magazine

More information

For each of the quotations below, consider the effects of language and structure:

For each of the quotations below, consider the effects of language and structure: Revise the play by choosing from the shorter and longer revision activities throughout. They are designed to support your understanding of the play for the purpose of the exam, and are organised in three

More information

Macbeth. William Shakespeare. Act 1, Scene 3

Macbeth. William Shakespeare. Act 1, Scene 3 Macbeth By William Shakespeare Act 1, Scene 3 SCENE. A heath near Forres. (Thunder. Enter the three Witches) Where hast thou been, sister? Killing swine. Sister, where thou? A sailor's wife had chestnuts

More information

SCENE III. A heath near Forres.

SCENE III. A heath near Forres. Purpose 1) Introduce the Weird Sisters prophecies re Macbeth and Banquo 2) Introduce and contrast Macbeth and Banquo 3) Underscore Macbeth s association with the Weird Sisters (evil) 4) Reveal Macbeth

More information

Major Themes in Shakespeare s Macbeth

Major Themes in Shakespeare s Macbeth Major Themes in Shakespeare s Macbeth Kingship The king was a sacred figure and therefore his murder took the form of a sacrilege. Duncan was Scotland s lawful king. No earthly individual had the right

More information

To find the mind s construction in the face. He was a gentleman on whom I built An absolute trust. Enter MACBETH, BANQUO, ROSS and ANGUS

To find the mind s construction in the face. He was a gentleman on whom I built An absolute trust. Enter MACBETH, BANQUO, ROSS and ANGUS Year 10 Macbeth IN-CLASS PASSAGE ANALYSIS 2 of the following 4 passages will be provided for your in-class passage analysis to be completed under test conditions. PASSAGE 1 Act 1 Scene 4, 1-32 DUNCAN:

More information

Match the following quote to the character that spoke it AND give the importance/relevance/meaning behind the quote.

Match the following quote to the character that spoke it AND give the importance/relevance/meaning behind the quote. Macbeth Test Name Date Match the following quote to the character that spoke it AND give the importance/relevance/meaning behind the quote. a. Lady Macbeth b. Macbeth c. Ross d. Duncan e. Apparition f.

More information

COME YOU SPIRITS (LADY MACBETH) AN EDITED SCRIPT COMPRISING EXTRACTS FROM MACBETH ACT 1 SCENES 5 AND 7

COME YOU SPIRITS (LADY MACBETH) AN EDITED SCRIPT COMPRISING EXTRACTS FROM MACBETH ACT 1 SCENES 5 AND 7 COME YOU SPIRITS () AN EDITED SCRIPT COMPRISING EXTRACTS FROM ACT 1 SCENES 5 AND 7 Notes 1 RSC Associate Schools Playmaking Festival 2018. COME YOU SPIRITS () AN EDITED SCRIPT COMPRISING EXTRACTS FROM

More information

10/18/ About the Man & Context for the Play. English

10/18/ About the Man & Context for the Play. English About the Man & Context for the Play English 621 2010 Generously Liberated from Cliffsnotes and Sparknotes 10/18/2010 1 From Cliffsnotes and Sparknotes 10/18/2010 2 The most influential writer in all of

More information

Sample Macbeth essay on key scene turning point

Sample Macbeth essay on key scene turning point Sample Macbeth essay on key scene turning point In William Shakespeare s Macbeth there is a key scene which has a drastic impact on the rest of the play (turning point). The play focuses around the character

More information

Grade 11 Macbeth Scene Questions Memorandum

Grade 11 Macbeth Scene Questions Memorandum Act 1 1. They are able to predict the future. 2. Stormy. The play will include storms and conflict. 3. It implies that nothing is as it appears to be. 1. He is a brave soldier and a noble man, a fearless

More information

Literary Terms Imagery- Paradox- Foreshadowing- Aside- Soliloquy-

Literary Terms Imagery- Paradox- Foreshadowing- Aside- Soliloquy- Name: Per: Important Items of Focus in Macbeth Thematic Ideas The reflection of unnatural deeds in nature. Things are not always what they seem. The destructiveness of selfish ambition. The powerful influence

More information

Macbeth. by William Shakespeare Edited by Nathan Criman. Performance Rights

Macbeth. by William Shakespeare Edited by Nathan Criman. Performance Rights by William Shakespeare Edited by Nathan Criman Performance Rights It is an infringement of the federal copyright law to copy or reproduce this script in any manner or to perform this play without royalty

More information

When the Battle's Lost and Won: Equivocations Influence on Power. Williams Shakespeare's Macbeth

When the Battle's Lost and Won: Equivocations Influence on Power. Williams Shakespeare's Macbeth When the Battle's Lost and Won: Equivocations Influence on Power in Williams Shakespeare's Macbeth "All meanings, we know, depend on the key of interpretation." - George Eliot Equivocation is defined by

More information

MACBETH. Three Witches ENTER to audience over SOUNDS OF BATTLE WITCH 1 WITCH 2 WITCH 3. That will be ere the set of sun. WITCH 1. Where the place?

MACBETH. Three Witches ENTER to audience over SOUNDS OF BATTLE WITCH 1 WITCH 2 WITCH 3. That will be ere the set of sun. WITCH 1. Where the place? Three Witches ENTER to audience over SOUNDS OF BATTLE When shall we meet again? In thunder, lighting or in rain? When the hurly- burly s done. When the battle is lost and won. That will be ere the set

More information

Shakespeare paper: Macbeth

Shakespeare paper: Macbeth En KEY STAGE 3 LEVELS 4 7 2006 satspapers.org English test Shakespeare paper: Macbeth Please read this page, but do not open the booklet until your teacher tells you to start. Write your name, the name

More information

Macbeth Act V. Act V, Scene i takes place late at night in Macbeth s castle.

Macbeth Act V. Act V, Scene i takes place late at night in Macbeth s castle. Macbeth Act V Act V, Scene i takes place late at night in Macbeth s castle. A doctor speaks with one of Lady Macbeth s attendants. She reports that the queen has been walking in her sleep lately. Lady

More information

Act III, Scene ii takes place shortly after in the Palace. Lady Macbeth and Macbeth are having a discussion.

Act III, Scene ii takes place shortly after in the Palace. Lady Macbeth and Macbeth are having a discussion. Macbeth Act III Act III, Scene i takes place in the palace. Banquo is alone. He is thinking about how the witches prophecies have come true, and he believes that Macbeth has had a part in it. Macbeth enters

More information

Macbeth Study Questions

Macbeth Study Questions Macbeth Study Questions ACT ONE In the first three scenes of Act One, rather than meeting Macbeth immediately, we are presented with others' reactions to him. Scene one begins with the witches, accepted

More information

MacBeth by William Shakespeare English B10 Mrs. K. Merriam Act 1, Scene 3

MacBeth by William Shakespeare English B10 Mrs. K. Merriam Act 1, Scene 3 Thunder. Enter the three WITCHES Where hast thou been, sister? Killing swine. Sister, where thou? A sailor s wife had chestnuts in her lap, And munched, and munched, and munched. Give me, quoth I. Aroint

More information

Literature in Context

Literature in Context Literature in Context Macbeth by William Shakespeare Workbook by Venetia Ozzi and Kathi Godiksen Edited by Patricia F. Braccio and Matthew J. Flament TM The purchase of this book entitles the individual

More information

ESSAY PLAN: BANQUO. Moral decline mirrors Macbeth's, but is neither as rapid nor as serious

ESSAY PLAN: BANQUO. Moral decline mirrors Macbeth's, but is neither as rapid nor as serious ESSAY PLAN: BANQUO Moral decline mirrors Macbeth's, but is neither as rapid nor as serious THESIS Interesting character who, like Macbeth, remains enigmatic to the end. This is what makes him so interesting:

More information

The Scotland Post. Forres, Scotland Sunday May pages. Hail King Macbeth. Co Written By Afi Koffi and Eli Zimmerman

The Scotland Post. Forres, Scotland Sunday May pages. Hail King Macbeth. Co Written By Afi Koffi and Eli Zimmerman The Scotland Post Forres, Scotland Sunday May 6 1550 2 pages Price: One Pound Hail King Macbeth Co Written By Afi Koffi and Eli Zimmerman Scotland has a new king. Hail King Macbeth, first of his name.

More information

English Literature GCSE Knowledge Organiser Year 11, Term 1 Macbeth

English Literature GCSE Knowledge Organiser Year 11, Term 1 Macbeth English Literature GCSE Knowledge Organiser Year 11, Term 1 Macbeth Summary Meeting three Witches on the blasted heath Ambition grew and poisoned brave Macbeth. Cunning, his wife led him to stab the king,

More information

MACBETH S JOURNEY. Stephen White Orange Stream. Monday, March 26, 12

MACBETH S JOURNEY. Stephen White Orange Stream. Monday, March 26, 12 MACBETH S JOURNEY Stephen White Orange Stream MACBETH IN ACT 1 Quote The Prince of Cumberland that is a step On which I must fall down or else o erleap (Act 1 scene 4, Pg. 15, line 48-49) WHY I USED YOUNG

More information

Villain or victim? Is Macbeth a victim of external circumstances or a man solely driven by evil?

Villain or victim? Is Macbeth a victim of external circumstances or a man solely driven by evil? Villain or victim? Is Macbeth a victim of external circumstances or a man solely driven by evil? Macbeth is the most widely translated Shakespeare play for good reason. The legend of Macbeth is a timeless

More information

2. he unseam'ʹd him from the nave to the chops The bloody Sergeant'ʹs description of Macbeth'ʹs killing of the rebel Macdonwald.

2. he unseam'ʹd him from the nave to the chops The bloody Sergeant'ʹs description of Macbeth'ʹs killing of the rebel Macdonwald. William Shakespeare (1564-1616) from Quotes from Macbeth 1. Fair is foul, and foul is fair The witches'ʹ philosophy of life. 2. he unseam'ʹd him from the nave to the chops The bloody Sergeant'ʹs description

More information

Angus Sides Speaking scenes: 3, 22, 29 Non-speaking scenes: 2, 4, 6

Angus Sides Speaking scenes: 3, 22, 29 Non-speaking scenes: 2, 4, 6 Angus Sides Speaking scenes: 3, 22, 29 Non-speaking scenes: 2, 4, 6 Scene 3 (second half) Into the air; and what seem'd corporal melted As breath into the wind. Would they had stay'd! Were such things

More information

MacBeth by William Shakespeare English B10 Mrs. K. Merriam Act 3, Scene 1

MacBeth by William Shakespeare English B10 Mrs. K. Merriam Act 3, Scene 1 Enter Thou hast it now: king, Cawdor, Glamis, all, As the weird women promised, and I fear Thou played st most foully for t. Yet it was said It should not stand in thy posterity, But that myself should

More information

Starting with this extract, explore how Shakespeare presents Macbeth as a character who believes in supernatural power.

Starting with this extract, explore how Shakespeare presents Macbeth as a character who believes in supernatural power. Macbeth as a character who believes in supernatural power. Banquo Good sir, why do you start; seem to fear Things that do sound so fair? I' the name of truth, Are ye fantastical, or that indeed Which outwardly

More information

A. Macbeth B. Lady Macbeth C. Banquo D. Malcolm E. Macduff

A. Macbeth B. Lady Macbeth C. Banquo D. Malcolm E. Macduff Directions: Multiple choice. 2 points each. Match the quote with the speaker. Notice that some of the letters are used for different people. A. Macbeth B. Lady Macbeth C. Banquo D. Malcolm E. Macduff 1.

More information

Macbeth. William Shakespeare. Act 5, Scene 8

Macbeth. William Shakespeare. Act 5, Scene 8 Macbeth By William Shakespeare Act 5, Scene 8 SCENE. Another part of the field. (Enter ) Why should I play the Roman fool, and die On mine own sword? whiles I see lives, the gashes Do better upon them.

More information

Macbeth Summaries Act 5.notebook March 21, 2014

Macbeth Summaries Act 5.notebook March 21, 2014 Macbeth Summaries and Notes: Act 5 1 Act 5, Scene 1 The Sleepwalk Scene A doctor and Gentlewoman observe Lady M sleepwalking as she has done for several nights She rubs her hands and relives the murders

More information

Contents. iii. Handout

Contents. iii. Handout Contents Handout General Introduction... v Preliminary Notes to the Teacher... vii An Introduction to... xi Lesson 1: Beginning the Play... 1 1, 2 Lesson 2:, the Tragic Hero... 7 3, 4 Lesson 3: The Witches

More information

dagger, eyes, blood, sleep, witchcraft, wolf, ghost, bell, hell

dagger, eyes, blood, sleep, witchcraft, wolf, ghost, bell, hell Act 2 Scene I Macbeth's Castle 1. Banquo There's husbandry in heaven; their candles are all out merciful powers, restrain in me the cursed thoughts that nature gives way to in repose! 2. Banquo This diamond

More information

Class Period: MACBETH NOTE TAKING GUIDE: ACT I

Class Period: MACBETH NOTE TAKING GUIDE: ACT I Name: Class Period: MACBETH NOTE TAKING GUIDE: ACT I Please note that all italicized terms in this packet must be defined on the final exam. 1. List three characteristics of Macbeth that are heroic. Provide

More information

Plot sort. Can you place the plot in the right order? The beginning and end are already in the right place.

Plot sort. Can you place the plot in the right order? The beginning and end are already in the right place. Lesson 1 Plot sort Can you place the plot in the right order? The beginning and end are already in the right place. Three strange witches meet. Duncan makes Macbeth Thane of Cawdor Macbeth & Lady Macbeth

More information

LitCharts. Macbeth. The best way to study, teach, and learn about books. EXTRA CREDIT BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE HISTORICAL CONTEXT

LitCharts. Macbeth. The best way to study, teach, and learn about books. EXTRA CREDIT BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE HISTORICAL CONTEXT LitCharts The best way to study, teach, and learn about books. Macbeth BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE Shakespeare's father was a glove-maker, and Shakespeare received no more than a grammar school

More information

the time They met me in the learned And yet aid doth seem To have ONLINE RESOURCES Australian

the time They met me in the learned And yet aid doth seem To have ONLINE RESOURCES Australian BELLSHAKESPEARE ONLINE RESOURCES MACBETH- POST-PERFORMANCEE LEARNING ACTIVITIES ACTIVITY ONE: The Language of Ambition Reading and Writing Macbeth is often referred to as a play that reeks of driving ambition.

More information

The Unnoble Nobles: Notes on Shakespeare's Masterful Characterization in Macbeth

The Unnoble Nobles: Notes on Shakespeare's Masterful Characterization in Macbeth www.ssoar.info The Unnoble Nobles: Notes on Shakespeare's Masterful Characterization in Macbeth Ramin, Zohreh; Shafinasab, Alireza Veröffentlichungsversion / Published Version Zeitschriftenartikel / journal

More information

PiXL Independence. English Literature Student Booklet KS4. V. Thematic and Ideas Based Questions 10 credits per question

PiXL Independence. English Literature Student Booklet KS4. V. Thematic and Ideas Based Questions 10 credits per question PiXL Independence English Literature Student Booklet KS4 AQA and Edexcel Style Macbeth Contents: I. Multiple Choice Questions 10 credits per set II. III. IV. Context Questions 20 credits Major Characters

More information

SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES

SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES 20-2: Macbeth THREE-DIMENSIONAL SHAKESPEARE 2 SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES INVERNESS. MACBETH S CASTLE Enter a PORTER. PORTER: Here s a knocking indeed! If a man were porter of hell-gate, he should

More information

Macbeth. How it works.

Macbeth. How it works. Macbeth We intend to place all the Shakespeare activities we have in the project online as time and opportunity permits, but the first to appear is an activity developed in Leeds when we ran a workshop

More information

A Level English Literature Summer Work

A Level English Literature Summer Work A Level English Literature Summer Work At the induction session in July 2015, it was explained to you that you will be required to purchase your texts for both the examination and the coursework elements

More information

REVELATION SPEAKS TODAY

REVELATION SPEAKS TODAY COURTROOM Volume 10 Issue 2 JUNE 2010 WHO, WHAT, WHY, WHEN RST SEMINARS WHO is Present in the Courtroom? THOSE ATTENDING The Father: (Dan 7:9) The Ancient of days did sit, whose garment was white as snow,

More information

CURRICULUM OBJECTIVES

CURRICULUM OBJECTIVES 20-1: The Consequences of Our Ethics and Morality MACBETH QUOTATIONS BOOKLET 2 SHAKESPEAREAN DRAMA UNIT CURRICULUM OBJECTIVES STUDENTS WILL BE ABLE TO DEMONSTRATE: 1. The ability to read aloud parts of

More information

Julius Caesar - Act 2, Scene 1

Julius Caesar - Act 2, Scene 1 Name: Date: Scan for Audio > Julius Caesar - Act 2, Scene 1 Summary Brutus has not been able to sleep since he spoke with Cassius because he has been thinking about the idea of killing Caesar, and that

More information

Revision booklet Ms. Gee

Revision booklet Ms. Gee AQA English Literature Paper 1 Macbeth REMINDER Revision booklet Ms. Gee In the exam, you will be presented with a short extract from the play. There will only be ONE question on Macbeth you MUST answer

More information

Macbeth Soliloquy1 Soliloquy1

Macbeth Soliloquy1 Soliloquy1 Macbeth Soliloquy1(Act I.3) [Aside] This supernatural soliciting Cannot be ill, cannot be good: if ill, Why hath it given me earnest of success, Commencing in a truth? I am thane of Cawdor: If good, why

More information

Macbeth. Act 3 Scene 2, line 8 to the end Act 3 Scene 4, line 83 to the end

Macbeth. Act 3 Scene 2, line 8 to the end Act 3 Scene 4, line 83 to the end Macbeth Act 3 Scene 2, line 8 to the end Act 3 Scene 4, line 83 to the end In these extracts how does Macbeth s language show that he feels afraid but is determined to keep his power? Support your ideas

More information

Close Reading of Macbeth Act I Scene 7

Close Reading of Macbeth Act I Scene 7 Close Reading of Macbeth Act I Scene 7 1 Close- Reading of Macbeth Act I, Scene 7 Assignment: Answer the questions below using evidence from the text. You will need to re-read the scene several times.

More information

Shakespeare Quiz: Popular Culture and Literature

Shakespeare Quiz: Popular Culture and Literature EDI510 English Pedagogy Name: Score: /40 Grade: Shakespeare Quiz: Popular Culture and Literature I. Multiple choice section. Circle the answer that best completes each question or statement (22 points).

More information

The Flattery of the Fates: A Sketch on the Three Witches in Macbeth and the Two Evil Sisters, Goneril and Regan, in King Lear

The Flattery of the Fates: A Sketch on the Three Witches in Macbeth and the Two Evil Sisters, Goneril and Regan, in King Lear The Flattery of the Fates: A Sketch on the Three Witches in Macbeth and the Two Evil Sisters, Goneril and Regan, in King Lear By Aimee C Faunillan There are as many similarities with Shakespeare s plays

More information

DESTROYING THE SERPENT

DESTROYING THE SERPENT November 25, 2017 DESTROYING THE SERPENT The first great prophecy of Christ was spoken by God on the same day Adam and Eve obeyed the voice of the Serpent and ate the forbidden fruit. This great act of

More information

«MR & MRS MACBETH» By Sam Pinnell & Lucille O Flanagan. An adaptation of the original masterpiece. By William Shakespeare

«MR & MRS MACBETH» By Sam Pinnell & Lucille O Flanagan. An adaptation of the original masterpiece. By William Shakespeare «MR & MRS» By Sam Pinnell & Lucille O Flanagan An adaptation of the original masterpiece By William Shakespeare October 2012 SCENE I : (FILM ONE) WITCHES ON FILM : A wild and desolate place. Thunder and

More information

Julius Caesar 2: Ethos and Pathos

Julius Caesar 2: Ethos and Pathos Julius Caesar 2: Ethos and Pathos Rhetoric is the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion ESH101 Shakespeare 2017-18 (Aristotle, The Art of Rhetoric, 1.2) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1bng_6hzlpm

More information

Completamento di Cinema

Completamento di Cinema Completamento di Cinema 1971, by Roman Polansky : Macbeth, Thane of Glamis, is coming back from battle with his friends Banquo when they meet three witches. They predict that Macbeth will be Thane of Cawdor

More information

To be opened on receipt Monday 30 January Friday 1 June 2012

To be opened on receipt Monday 30 January Friday 1 June 2012 To be opened on receipt Monday 30 January Friday 1 June 2012 GCSE DRAMA A583/01 From Concept to Creation *A525630612* This paper may be issued to teachers upon receipt and given to candidates up to ten

More information

What Awaits Man: A Closer Look at the Deeper, Darker Macbeth

What Awaits Man: A Closer Look at the Deeper, Darker Macbeth Student Sample #1 1 Student Sample #1 Mr. Wheeler English 10, Per. 4 March 16, 2015 What Awaits Man: A Closer Look at the Deeper, Darker Macbeth When Throne of Blood premiered in 1957, it received mixed

More information

MACBETH, ACT IV, SCENE I. A cavern. In the middle, a boiling cauldron.

MACBETH, ACT IV, SCENE I. A cavern. In the middle, a boiling cauldron. , ACT IV, SCENE I. A cavern. In the middle, a boiling cauldron. Thunder. Enter the three Witches Thrice the brinded cat hath mew'd. Thrice and once the hedge-pig whined. Harpier cries 'Tis time, 'tis time.

More information

Critical/Analytical Response to Literature Assignment rubric exemplars rationales

Critical/Analytical Response to Literature Assignment rubric exemplars rationales Critical/Analytical Response to Literature Assignment rubric exemplars rationales "What idea does the author develop regarding ruling passion?" Critical Analytical Response to Literary Texts Assignment

More information

Macbeth ALL CLEAR SHAKESPEARE. Act 1, Scene 1. Act 1, Scene 2

Macbeth ALL CLEAR SHAKESPEARE.  Act 1, Scene 1. Act 1, Scene 2 CLEAR SHAKESPEARE Macbeth Act 1, Scene 1 When shall we three meet again? In thunder, lightning, or in rain? Thunder and lightning. Enter three WITCHES Thunder and lightning. Three WITCHES enter When will

More information

Macbeth Home Learning Name: Teacher:

Macbeth Home Learning Name: Teacher: 1 Macbeth Home Learning Name: Teacher: 2 Literature Assessment Objectives: Lit AO1: Use textual references, including quotations, to support and illustrate interpretations. Lit AO2: Analyse the language,

More information

The Grammardog Guide to The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare

The Grammardog Guide to The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare The Grammardog Guide to The Tragedy of Julius Caesar by William Shakespeare All quizzes use sentences from the play. Includes over 250 multiple choice questions. THE TRAGEDY OF JULIUS CAESAR by William

More information

The Renaissance and Shakespeare Dr. Payal Nagpal Department of English University of Delhi. Lecture - 12 Lecture on Macbeth

The Renaissance and Shakespeare Dr. Payal Nagpal Department of English University of Delhi. Lecture - 12 Lecture on Macbeth The Renaissance and Shakespeare Dr. Payal Nagpal Department of English University of Delhi Lecture - 12 Lecture on Macbeth Hello, the next lecture in this MOOC on The Renaissance in Shakespeare is by Doctor

More information

EDGEFIELD SECONDARY SCHOOL LITERATURE DEPARTMENT Julius Caesar Act 5: Marcus Brutus Character

EDGEFIELD SECONDARY SCHOOL LITERATURE DEPARTMENT Julius Caesar Act 5: Marcus Brutus Character EDGEFIELD SECONDARY SCHOOL LITERATURE DEPARTMENT Julius Caesar Act 5: Marcus Brutus Character Name: ( ) Date: Class: Marcus Brutus Significance to the plot of Julius Caesar: Which line of the entire play

More information

Other Lords, Gentlemen, Officers, Soldiers, Murderers, Attendants, and Messengers

Other Lords, Gentlemen, Officers, Soldiers, Murderers, Attendants, and Messengers Notes 1 Dramatis Personae DUNCAN King of Scotland Thane of Glamis, later of Cawdor, then King of Scotland LADY his wife Thane of Fife, a nobleman of Scotland LADY his wife MALCOLM son of Duncan DONALBAIN

More information

Julius Caesar. Act 5 Marcus Brutus Character

Julius Caesar. Act 5 Marcus Brutus Character Julius Caesar Act 5 Marcus Brutus Character Plot Which line of the entire play do you think is the climax? Et tu, Brute? Then fall, Caesar! WHY?! Brutus Importance to the Plot The play reaches its climax

More information

Page 141 BRUTUS Cassius, be constant Calm and steady. Very surprising because his body language and state of mind show otherwise in Act Two.

Page 141 BRUTUS Cassius, be constant Calm and steady. Very surprising because his body language and state of mind show otherwise in Act Two. Julius Caesar: Act Three Scene 1 3.1.5 Page 139 ARTEMIDORUS O Caesar, read mine first; for mine s a suit That touches Caesar nearer. Read it, great Caesar. Panics because he wants Caesar to read his letter

More information

JULIUS CAESAR. Summary. Act II, Scene II

JULIUS CAESAR. Summary. Act II, Scene II JULIUS CAESAR Summary Act II, Scene II This act opens with Julius Caesar saying there has been no peace on heaven or on Earth as his wife, Calpurnia had a nightmare. She saw someone murdering Caesar and

More information

Welcome to Rehoboth New Life Center. Tuesday Study June 20th 2017

Welcome to Rehoboth New Life Center. Tuesday Study June 20th 2017 Welcome to Rehoboth New Life Center Tuesday Study June 20th 2017 Babylon & The Gates of Hell Revelation 9:1 And the fifth angel sounded, and I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth: and to him was

More information

Prestwick House. Side-By-Sides. Click here. to learn more about this Side-By-Side! Click here. to find more Classroom Resources for this title!

Prestwick House. Side-By-Sides. Click here. to learn more about this Side-By-Side! Click here. to find more Classroom Resources for this title! Prestwick House Sample Side-By-Sides Click here to learn more about this Side-By-Side! Click here to find more Classroom Resources for this title! More from Prestwick House Literature Literary Touchstone

More information

The Joyful Mysteries. Opening Prayer in Petition This prayer to be prayed after the Sign of the Cross.

The Joyful Mysteries. Opening Prayer in Petition This prayer to be prayed after the Sign of the Cross. The Joyful Mysteries Opening Prayer in Petition R. Hail! At thy feet I humbly kneel * to offer thee a Crown of Roses, * snow white buds to remind thee of thy joys, * each bud recalling to thee a holy mystery;

More information

First Witch: When shall we three meet again.in thunder, lightning, or in rain?

First Witch: When shall we three meet again.in thunder, lightning, or in rain? MACBETH I. (THUNDER/LIGHTNING: birth of witches BATTLE) First Witch: When shall we three meet again.in thunder, lightning, or in rain? Second Witch: When the hurlyburly s done. When the battle s lost and

More information

MACBETH. by William Shakespeare

MACBETH. by William Shakespeare MACBETH by William Shakespeare THE AUTHOR William Shakespeare (1564-1616) was born into the family of a prosperous tradesman in Stratford-upon-Avon, England. While in his mid-teens, he was forced to leave

More information

Revelation 22: The Invitation of the Lamb

Revelation 22: The Invitation of the Lamb Revelation 22:1-5 Revelation 22: The Invitation of the Lamb 22 And he showed me a river of water of life, bright as crystal, proceeding out of the throne of God and of the Lamb, 2 in the midst of the street

More information

You know your own degrees; sit down. At first and last the hearty welcome.

You know your own degrees; sit down. At first and last the hearty welcome. SCENE IV. A Hall in the palace. A banquet prepared. Enter Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, Ross, Lennox, Lords,and Attendants. The Thanes arrive at the party and are welcomed by Macbeth and Lady Macbeth. You know

More information

Macbeth William Shakespeare

Macbeth William Shakespeare Macbeth William Shakespeare 1606 by Robert Owens Scott Associate Producer Playhouse Repertory Company, New York City SERIES EDITOR Michael Spring, Editor, Literary Cavalcade, Scholastic Inc. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

More information

JULIUS CAESER JULIUS CAESAR

JULIUS CAESER JULIUS CAESAR JULIUS CAESAR (From Act III Scene 2) Introduction The play opens with Julius Caesar s victorious return to Rome after defeating the sons of Pompey. While people rejoice, there is a group which fears that

More information

Example Response for Section A: Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet

Example Response for Section A: Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet SAMPLE Example Response for Section A: Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet Read the following extract from Act 1, Scene 5 of Romeo and Juliet and then answer the questions. At this point in the play Romeo and

More information

Enter Malcolm and Macduff.

Enter Malcolm and Macduff. Malcolm: Side 1 MacDuff/Malcom: Side 1 Enter Malcolm and Macduff. Let us seek out some desolate shade and there Weep our sad bosoms empty. Let us rather Hold fast the mortal sword and, like good men, Bestride

More information

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education LITERATURE(ENGLISH)

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education LITERATURE(ENGLISH) Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International General Certificate of Secondary Education LITERATURE(ENGLISH) Paper 3 Drama(Open Text) 0486/32 May/June 2018 45 minutes Texts studied should

More information

Saviors of Liberty or Murderous Assassins?

Saviors of Liberty or Murderous Assassins? Saviors of Liberty or Murderous Assassins? Sworn Statement of Gaius Cassius Longinus, Prosecution Witness My name is Gaius Cassius Longinus, or Cassius. I was once a part of the great Roman Senate. I am

More information

16. Macbeth. Macdonwald is described as

16. Macbeth. Macdonwald is described as 16. Macbeth No-one has ever doubted that Macbeth is a tragedy and not a history play. Yet a mere summary of the plot could make it sound very like a Scottish Richard III. Macbeth and Richard both stop

More information

Act 1. Scene 3. Macbeth Act 1 Scene 3 and Act 3 Scene 1. A heath near Forres. Thunder. Enter three Witches. Original version

Act 1. Scene 3. Macbeth Act 1 Scene 3 and Act 3 Scene 1. A heath near Forres. Thunder. Enter three Witches. Original version Original version Act 1. Scene 3 A heath near Forres. Thunder. Enter three Witches Modern version Act 1. Scene 3 A heath near Forres. Thunder. Enter three Witches Where hast thou been, sister? Where have

More information

Contents. Memorization & Recitation...75 Master Words-to-Be-Defined List...76 Rhetoric Essay Template...78

Contents. Memorization & Recitation...75 Master Words-to-Be-Defined List...76 Rhetoric Essay Template...78 Contents How to Use This Study Guide with the Text & Literature Notebook...5 Notes & Instructions to Student... 7 Taking With Us What Matters...9 Four Stages to the Central One Idea...13 How to Mark a

More information

Macbeth Quotation Identification

Macbeth Quotation Identification Macbeth Quotation Identification Name 1 Directions: For the following quotations, identify: a) Who is speaking b) To whom he/she is speaking c) The situation, meaning, or importance of the quotation d)

More information

Through the Kings 4 SUNDAY SCHOOL APRIL 08, 2018

Through the Kings 4 SUNDAY SCHOOL APRIL 08, 2018 Through the Kings 4 SUNDAY SCHOOL APRIL 08, 2018 Years Title Key People 4000+ Pre History Adam, Enoch Noah 2165 1870 BC Patriarchs Abraham Joseph, Job 1460 BC Exodus & Judges Moses, Joshua, Boaz 1050 586

More information

Usually, if not always, in Shakespeare s Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Hamlet is the one who

Usually, if not always, in Shakespeare s Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Hamlet is the one who Yuliya Grebneva Eng. 203-01 Professor Riley March 8, 2013 The Tragedy of Claudius the Murderer Usually, if not always, in Shakespeare s Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Hamlet is the one who is seen as a tragic

More information