Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Macbeth - Act 1 & 2
- Act One
- Scene 1 - Witches make a first prophecy
- "fair is foul, and foul is fair"
- Witches speak in only
rhyming couplets
- Themes - reality and
appearance (nothing is
as it seems)
- Scene 2 - King Duncan hears reports of the battle
- Shakespeare contrasts the eerie
opening scenes from brutality
- Duncan and the Captain describe
Macbeth as "brave" and "valiant"
- Theme - reality and appearance
- Macbeth cuts of the traitors head which
foreshadows his own death later on
- Scene 3 - Wiches make 3 predictions
- " so foul and fair a day I have not seen"
- links to the witches prophecy
- Banquo and Macbeth react
differently to the predictions
- banquo is suspicious and
Macbeth is spellbound and is
scared by the powerful
ambition that the witches
have awakened in him
- Scene 4 - Macbeth is made Thane of Cawdor
- Duncan uses an extended metaphor of plants eg. "plant thee" to
show that he nurtures people who are loyal to him.
- Theme - Kingship and reality and appearance
- Macbeth is confused in this scene
- "black and deep desires"
- Scene 5 - Lady Macbeth
decides Duncan must die
- opens with LM reading a letter
alone from Macbeth about the
witches prophecies - audience
hears her inner thoughts
- She has no doubts about killing Duncan and sees that she'll have to force
Macbeth to do it because he's "too full o'th' milk of human kindness"
- LM soliloquy uses evil imagery - "smoke of hell" showing the evil
- her speech links to the witches - she uses imperatives
- Scene 6 - Duncan and the lords arrive at Macbeths castle
- Duncan is grateful for his hospitality and
everything M has done for him
- LM appears to be the perfect hostess,
Shakespeare contrasts this scene with the
previous one to show how false LM is.
- Dramatic irony is used all the
way through this scene.
- Scene 7 - Opens with Macbeths soliloquy and the Macbeths agree to kill Duncan
- Gives a list of reason why he shouldn't kill Duncan
- LM is forceful and bullie/persuades
Macbeth too go through with the killing
- She questions his masculinity, and says killing
Duncan will be "so much more the man"
- Double meaning - he'll be more of a man and he'll also be king
- Rejects her femininity by telling Macbeth
that shed kill her own child, trying to prove
how remorseless and evil she is.
- Act 2
- Banquo and his son, Fleance,
go for walk at night. Fleance is
a reminder to the audience
about the withes prophecy that
Banquos sons will be kings
- Scene 1 - the famous 'dagger' bit
- there aren't any stars: "their candles
are all out" - darkness symbolises the
evil Macbeth are going to do.
- Theme - the supernatural - he
starts seeing visions of a dagger
- Scene 2 - The deed is done
- Turning point in the action - Macbeth commits his first murder
- LM is waiting for Macbeth and she
is startled by every noise. She
couldn't kill Duncan because he
reminded her of her father,
suggesting she is not as merciless
as she seems.
- Murder takes place offstage - increasing the
suspense making the audience imagine the killing
- A lot of foreshadowing takes place in this scene
- "Neptunes ocean" - will clean the blood off his hands, he feels guilty
- Macbeth has "murdered sleep", sleep symbolises peace so it shows he wracked with guilt.
- Stage directions add to the tension
- Scene 3 - Duncan's body is discovered
- Porters comic monologue
relieves the tension, but
also builds suspense
- Macbeth confesses to killing Duncans servants
out of rage, when LM hears this she faints
- This could be to distract the other characters from Macbeths suspicious
behaviour or may actually be horrified by Macbeths violence
- Shakespeare uses dramatic
irony to increase the audiences
anticipation
- Macduff finds Duncans body
- Malcolm and Donaldbain run away making them
look guilty and allows Macbeth to take the throne.
- Scene 4 - Macbeth is about
to be made king
- A bridge between act 2 and act 3, to
create a sense of fear and uncertainty
- Strange events have happened since
Duncans death to show how the
natural order has been disrupted
- Macduff tells Rosse that Macbeth will be king, Macduff isn't
at the coronation suggesting he is suspicious of Macbeths
and sets himself up as Macbeths main enemy.
- Its dark during the day "dark night strangles
the travelling lamp"
- A falcon has been savagely killed by an owl - falcon
symbolises Duncan and the owl is Macbeth
- Horses eat each other
which is unnatural