Zusammenfassung der Ressource
AMBITION
- The lust for power
- The Murder of King Duncan
- To Macbeth's
surprise Malcom is
named Prince of
Cumberland
- that is a step I must fall
down on, or eels o'erleap,
For in my way it lies. Stars,
hide your fires; Let not light
see my black and deep
desires. The eye wink at
the, yet let that be which
the eye fears, when it is
done, to see.
- INTERNAL CONFLICT
- THE NATURE:
become king, fulfill
prophecy and show
manhood
- The murder is as
good as done. The
bell is telling me to
do it....Hear it not
Duncan
- Art not without ambition...What thou
wouldst highly,/ That thou holily;
wouldst not play false/And yet would
wrongly win
- "I am in blood, stepped
in so far that should I
wade no more"
- If good, why
do I yield to
that
suggestion.
Whose horrid
image doth
unfix my hair
- Macbeth finds many
things worng with killing
Duncan: the consequnces
he could face, that
Duncan is a good kings
and that Macbeth is his
kinsman and subject. He
says " I have no spur/ To
prick the sides of my
intent, but only/ Vaulting
ambition, which o'erleaps
itself/ And falls on
th'other.
- Lady Macbeth fuels the
road to the throne and the
fire within Macbeth
- Lady Macbeth calls upon the instruments of
darkness to make Macbeth and her rulers of Scotland
Anmerkungen:
- spirits make me less a woman and more a man
- You spirits/ That tend on mortal thoughts , unsex
me here/And fill me from the crown...of direst
cruelty. Make thick my blood/Stop up the access of
remorse...Sake my fell purpose, nor keep peace
between...Come to my woman's breasts,/And take
my milk for gal.
- She changes her nature because
Macbeth is "too o'th' mile of
human kindness to catch the
nearest way (murder)"
- Had he not resembled/My father as he
slept, I had done't.
- THE PLAN TO KILL THE KING
- Lady M: appearance of an
innocent flower when
really a serpent
- Kniving and foold
Duncan into thinking
she is most gracious to
have him as he will
bestow honorus upon
them
- Convinces
Macbeth to
commit the
crime
- Plans the murder and gets the two
chamberlians so drunk that their memory goes
up in smoke, so they will fall asleep. Then
Macbeth smears Duncan's blood will be on the
gaurds after Macbeth uses their daggers to kill
the king
- Lady Macbeth insults
Macbeth
- She says that you don't love me. Even as
the baby was smiling at me, I would have
plucked my nipple out of its mouth and
smashed its brain out against a wall if I had
sworn to-willing to give up her babe to get what she wants
- chastising of
manhood finalizes
the deed
- calls Macbeth a coward-afraid to
act the way you desire why not
take the crown (a drunken
man once full of hope and now
sick with fear)
- you were a man when
you dared to do it, if you
go one step further what
you dared to do before,
you'll be much more a
man. If not a man-what
beast were you when
you dared to do it
- Desire to diverge from said destiny
- fueled from the prophecies
- Macbeth finds the Weird Sisters for answers,
as he wants to know if he will remain king and
this will ease his tension
- The Weird Sister's appear before Macbeth and tell him
that he will also be Thane of Cawdor and then King
- At Macbeths first encounter
with the weird sisters he
questions their abilities, yet
he burns with desire to learn
more
- stay you
imperfect speakers
- But ’tis strange. And oftentimes, to win
us to our harm, The instruments of
darkness tell us truths, Win us with
honest trifles, to betray ’s In deepest
consequence.
- After he hears of his bright future, the ambition inside him is awakened and he is driven
to think of dark and immoral thoughts of how to gain power." I am thane of Cawdor. If
good, why do I yield to that suggestion/Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair." Act 1,
scene 3, page 6
- The Prince of Cumberland! That is a step On which I must fall down, or else o'erleap,
For in my way it lies. Stars, hide your fires; Let not light see my black and deep desires.
The eye wink at the hand; yet let that be Which the eye fears, when it is done, to see.
(1.4.4)
- There is a defiance of God by hastening the chain of being of
Heaven, Earth and Hell in which the world was
founded on.
- "What are these / So wither'd and so wild in their attire, / That look not like
the inhabitants o' the earth, / And yet are on't?" (1.3.39-42). He seeks the
future and council from immoral characters (witches) who believe in the
reverse of the Chain of Being.
- fair is foul and foul is fair
- He becomes too confident in his fate portrayed
by the witches and becomes obsessed with the
prophecy
- Acts in impuilsivness
- The greatest crime: Macbeth orders
the murder of Macduff's innocent and
helpless wife and children and all
relations. They are butchered though
they do not thwart his reign as
king-Macbeth's moral character has
plummeted he is a brutal and merciless
- Macduff is
determined to kill
Macbeth.
Anmerkungen:
- link to forces of balacne
- Nature becomes a symbol of political struggle and defiance
- The first witch states, "When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in
rain?"(1.1.1). The harsh weather resembles the chaos that will be unleashed because of
the broken Chain of Being.
- Hell; Lady Macbeth like Satan tempts Macbeth(man) to turn from God.
- Lady Macbeth does the supernatural and sleep walks
while speaking the twisted truth of Duncan's murder and
visualizes and smells the blood of Duncan on her hands.
- Lady Macbeth commits suicide.
- Macbeth does not have a divine right because he is not anointed by
God due to the fact that he murdered Duncan to get the golden round.
- Lady Macbeth calls upon dark forces and wants to feel unnatural,
"Stop up the access and passage to remorse, / That no
compunctious visiting's of nature / Shake my fell purpose"
(1.5.44-46).
- tainted by
- Macduff and Malcom: the
forces of balance
- Macduff goes to London to forge and alliance
with Lord Siward and Northumberland
- Macduff, Malcom and
other thanes and lords
including civilians lead
an attack against
Macbeth
- Macbeth is killed and
Malcom becomes king
- CONSEQUENCES:
paintings of fear and
of a guilty conscience
Anmerkungen:
- link between ghost of Banqou and "around him my guardian angel is rebuked"
- Macbeth is distraught and feels
guilty after murdering Duncan
- 'Glamis hath murdered sleep, and
therefore...Macbeth shall sleep no
more."
- Macbeth is shocked that he could not utter the name of God, as a
fallen man has the most need of blessing. He is tormented with
the thoughts of two servants who are frightened at he sight of his
hangman's hands. Yet, he could not reply Amen
- Macbeth would rather be unconscience and
wishes that Duncan could come back to life .
He grows frightened
- "What hands are here? They
pluck out mine eyes...my
hand will.../the multitude of
seas incarnadine,/Making the
green one red." (II.II.59-64)
- Lady Macbeth and Macbeth drift apart
- Lady M is not involved in the murders, as
Macbeth says that its best if she's innocent
of the knowledge. Also, she must ask
permission before she speaks to Macbeth.
- "Why do you keep alone, Of sorriest fancies your
companions making, Using those thoughts should have
indeed died/ With them they think on?
- Macbeth and Lady M have fulfilled the
first prophecy, yet they are troubled
- A Lonely Lady M states that "Naught's had, all spent,/
Where our desire is got without content/ 'Tis safter to be
that which we destroy/ Than by destruction dwell in
doubtful joy
- Lady Macbeth sleepwalks, her mind his anguished with grief.
She speaks what is in her mind ands most of what she told
Macbeth from the beginning of the first murder to off late. Lady
Macbeth now pays the price for the deed, as she end of
commiting suicide. This is no sickness, only guilt, she who
once planned the murder of the king and called upon the
darkness is afraid of it and attempts to light her path with
candle in hand.
- Life is brief, it is an empty
existence devoid of meaning "Out,
out, brief candle"
- The days creep slowly until the end of
time. And everyday takes fools closer to
their deaths. Life is an illusion-a poor
actor who worries for his hour on stage
and then in never hear from. Life is a
story told by an idiot, full of emotional
disturbance.
- My way od life/ Is fallen into the sere,
the yellow leaf,/ And that which should
accompany old age,/As honour, love,
obedience, troops of friends, I must
not look to have, but, in their stead,/
Curses, not loud but deep.
(V.iii.24-29)
- Macbeth is drained of emotion , he
says "She should have died
hereafter"
- Upon me they placed a fruitless crown/ And
put a barren sceptor in my grip.../No son of
mine succeeding.../Put rancors in the vessel of
my peace/...and mine eternal jewel/Given to
the common enemy of man,/ To make...the
seed of Banquo kings!"
- Macbeths constant need to express his rage
or protect his reign
- The nobles become suspicious of
Macbeth due to the scene he
created at the banquet. He is
haunted by Banquo's ghost and
speaks to the abstraction stating
"Thou canst not say I did it. /Never
shake/ Thy gory locks at me.
- "O, full of scorpions is my mind"
- Use of violence to retain the throne
- Macbeth orders men to kill Baqou and Fleance
- Macbeth is scared of Banqou he
has a wisdom that guides him to act
bravely and safely, Around him
Macbeths guardian angel is
rebuked. The prophecies state that
Banquo's sons will be kings, so
Macbeth wants to kill both Banqou
and Fleance
- "To be thus is nothing,/ But to be safely thus"
- Boundless intemperance In nature is a
tyranny. It hath been The untimely
emptying of the happy throne And fall of
many kings.Act 4, scene 3, pg 3
- Forces from England lead by Malcolm and
Macduff march to Dunsinane to overthrow
Macbeth and free Scotland of his rule.
- Even after one prophecy of the end of Macbeth's rule has been
fulfilled (Burnam Wood marches towards Dunsinane),
he is still determined to fight his fate. "Yet I will try the last.
Before my body I throw my warlike shield." -Act 5,scene 8,
pg.2
- The witches prophecies is fulfilled; a man not
born of women(Macduff) kills Macbeth.