Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Macbeth
- Witches
- "When the battle is lost and won"
- The war has two sides
and it is either last or
won but this battle has
lost and won
- "Fair is foul and foul is fair"
- Opposites is put together
- To be fair everything is ungreateful
- Paradox: The phrase employs, as it
foreshadows the deception of
Macbeth that prophecies of witches
would lead him to greatness, but they
would destroy him instead
- Consonance: It is a very good use of
consonance “f”, as fair, foul, foul, fair
shows mastery of the playwright
- Symbolism: The witches are symbolic of foul
but give fair advice and Macbeth outwardly
appears to be a hero, but inwardly he is a
dastard and plotter
- Macbeth
- "Stars hide your fires/ Let
not light see my black and
deep desires"
- Juxtaposition
"light" and "dark"
- Internal Conflict
- "I have almost forgot the taste of
fear... I have supped full of horrors;
Direness familiar to my slaughterous
thoughts Cannot once start me"
- "I have almost forgot the
taste of fear" Macbeth is
becoming emotionless
- He has become the worst he can be
- "I have supped full of
horrors" Metaphore to
dining with the devil
- "Life's but a walking shadow,
a poor player that struts and
fret his hour upon the stage
and then he heard no more"
- Macbeth's shadow hides the lies /sins
- Metaphore for fate
- Lady Macbeth time on stage
has come to an end
- Lady Macbeth
- "Unsex me
here"
- Get rid of her femininity
- "Come to my woman's
breast/ And take my
milk for gall"
- "Gall" is poison
- Get rid of her milk and
make them poison
- "Of direst cruelty; make
thick my blood"
- Make her more evil
- Look like th' innocent
flower,/ But be the
serpent under't"
- "Serpent" Biblical reference
- Commit the evil
deed but act like
you didn't do it
- Macduff
- "Macduff was from his
mother's womb
untimely ripped
- The first man to be
born from a
cesarean section