Order of Murders:
1st Duncan, 2nd
Banquo, 3rd
Macduff's household
The murders become progressively more brutal:
Duncan is stabbed > Banquo is assasinated by 2
thugs > Macduff's family and household are
slaughtered.
Increase in brutality implies macbeth's increase in villainy
Macbeth becomes less and less
associated with the murders: Duncan he
kills personally > Banquo's murder was
committed by thugs > Macduff & co. are
slaughtered by Macbeth's men
This could show increasing villainy as
Macbeth cannot be bothered to
commit them himself and therefore
the victims are indifferent to him.
Lady Macbeth persuades Macbeth to
kill Duncan, she could be seen as more
villainous than Macbeth
The presentation of the murders.
Duncan's is off stage - this
shows respect for the king and
his dignity stays intact
He was murdered in his sleep - couldn't
defend himslef, showing that he wasn't
weak as he wasn't beaten in a fight
Banquo was murdered brutally on stage - this is for
entertainment purposes
Macduff's household
and family are
brutally murdered on
stage
This shows Macbeth's power and villainy - he
kills them to threaten Macduff, it is done
maliciously and without cause - they are
unnecessary murders - children and women are
killed
Supernatural
Witches
They are a
supernatural
forces
controlling fate
The villainy is built on their
prophecies
Macbeth commits the
murders because of the
prophecies
The witches
already seem to
know Macbeth,
showing that he
might already be
associated with
them, making him
villainous.
The dagger and
Ghost of Banquo
These may not be seen as
supernatural as they are visions
that Macbeth experiences possibly
due to his guilty conscience
Banquo's ghost haunts
Macbeth, making him
have a guilty
conscience
The dagger which is imagined
refers to the quote: 'foul is fair
and fair is foul'. This means
that what seems right isn't
right and what seems wrong
isn't really wrong
The vision of the dagger
could also symbolize death
hanging in the air
Language
Descriptions of characters from mythology
"With Tarquin's ravishing strides, towards his design"
"Moves like a ghost"
"Witchcraft celebrates"
Dramatic
Techniques
Soliloquies
(order)
1st: "He's here in double trust...."
This is Macbeth's response to the witches
Scared and overwhelmed: "This
supernatural soliciting//Cannot be
ill, cannot be good","Whose horrid
image doth unfix my hair...".
Ambition and excitement: "Why
hath it given me earnest of
success?". Disbelief: "...stand not
within the prospect of belief".
Intrigued: "...tell me more" - his
curiosity suggest villainy.
Villainy is presented through the soliloquy as it gives an insight to his thoughts.
However Macbeth doesn't seem very villainous yet but the idea of regicide is born
2nd: "Is this a dagger which I see before me..."
Before he kills the King (like a pep talk)
It is a pivotal moment at which Macbeth clearly turns
villainous.
Fearing discovery: "Thou sure and firm-set earth//hear not my
steps..., for fear//Thy very stones prate of my whereabout".
Wants to be disassociated with the deed: "wither'd
murder...moves like a ghost". Guilty (conscience driving him
crazy: "...a dagger of the mind, a false creation,//proceeding
from the heat-oppressed brain?". Ambition: "I go, and it is
done..."
Imagery
Blood
It is used to convey guilt, murder, treachery and evil
"And on thy blade and dudgeon gouts of blood"
This quote could also be interpreted as a
premonition of the murder Macbeth will commit
Weather
Thunder and lightning announces the witches
Premonition of villainous characters
"When shall we three meet
again, In thunder, lightning, or
in rain"
There are storms on the night of
Duncan's murder
The fore-warning of villainous actions
Darkness
Dark = villainy and evil
Light = good and truth
"Stars, hide your fires, let no
light see my dark desires"
Stars are the truth and macbeth orders them not
to shine as their light will reveal his villainous
deeds
"Come, thick night...nor
heaven to peep through
the blanket of the dark..."
Darkness allows Lady
Macbeth to do evil - It
implies that deceit and
treachery can go unnoticed
and villainous acts can be
done freely
Language & Structure
Poetry
Blank Verse
Iambic Pentameter
10 syllables per line and stresses every other syllable
It groups characters (villains)
The witches talk mainly in rhym,
therefore act as 1 unit of evil and
villainy
Macbeth talks a lot in imabic pentameter
and blank verse - a form of poetry, therefore
suggesting an association with the witches
The use of Macbeth's soliloquies (see Dramatic Techniques - Soliloquies)