Title: MACBETH
1MACBETH
William Shakespeare
Alex Pavlakis, Caryl Brunner, Joan Burger, Jaimee
Crossan, Ariana Incao, Emily Lemen
2Setting
- Macbeth is set mainly around Scotland. The
story starts off with the fighting near Duncans
castle, and then shifts to Macbeths castle on
Dunsinane Hill. Fife is where Macduff lives and
where his family is killed. Macbeth meets the
witches in a desert place. There is one scene in
England as well when Macduff meets Malcolm. The
time period is in the 11th century.
3Macbeth Plot Summary
- Play opens with the three witches scrounging the
battlefield - Kind Duncan receives news of the victories of
Macbeth and Banquo against the armies of Ireland
and Norway - Macbeth and Banquo encounter the witches, who
prophesize Macbeth will be made Thane of Cawdor
and eventually King of Scotland - The Witches also prophesize that Banquos sons
will be kings, however he will never receive the
title - Macbeth and Banquo are skeptical but soon after
Ross arrives bringing Macbeth news of the traitor
thane of Cawdor, Macbeths new title - At this point, Macbeth begins to wonder if he
could ever become King and he writes to his wife - Lady Macbeth wants her husband to obtain the
throne and convinces him to commit regicide or
the murder of a King - Macbeth and Lady Macbeth devise a plan to kill
King Duncan in his sleep which includes - Lady Macbeth drugging the guards (they will think
theyre responsible for the murder) - Macbeth must stab Kind Duncan (also must overcome
fear of regicide, guilt, and hallucinations) - Lady Macbeth plants the bloody daggers with the
unconscious guards
4Plot Summary Continued
- As King, Macbeth is not content for he is
constantly fearful his power will come to an end
- Macbeth organizes the murder of his friend
Banquo, and Banquos son Fleance - Banquo is killed however Fleance escapes further
preventing Macbeth from resting - At the banquet, Macbeth envisions the blood
bolstered ghost of Banquo, causing a dramatic
scene and essentially making everyone question
Macbeths sanity as King - Macbeth visits the witches who show him four
apparitions - First, an armed head- warns Macbeth of Macduff
(this Macbeth already knew) - Second, a bloody child- No mortal will ever harm
Macbeth - Third, a child with a crown and tree- Macbeth
will never be defeated until Birnam wood walk to
Dunsinane Hill - Fourth, 8 Kings all resembling Banquo and his
bloody ghost (Macbeth becomes outraged at this
sight) - Macbeth is slightly relieved but he learns that
Macduff has fled to England to join Malcolm - Macbeth orders Macduffs castle seized and his
family murdered - Lady Macbeth grows sick with guilt and eventually
commits suicide - At this news Macbeth becomes very pessimistic yet
continues to fight - Eventually, the English forces arrive, disguised
in the branches of Birnam wood, and Macduff, who
was not born of woman, beheads Macbeth - Malcolm becomes the new, and rightful, King of
Scotland
5Main Character Descriptions
- Macbeth- Thane of Cawdor and Glamis, eventually
King, easily tempted into murder to fulfill his
vaulting ambition, violent, ambitious, lacks
ruling skills. - Lady Macbeth- strong and ruthless, ambitious, has
a lust for power, conscious to the point she
commits suicide, manipulative. - Banquo- brave, noble, his children will inherit
the throne (according to witchs prophecies),
murdered by Macbeth - Three Witches- prophecies prompt Macbeth to
murder Duncan, comical, supernatural, could be
independent agents toying with human lives or
agents of fate - King Duncan- King of Scotland, murdered by Macbeth
6Major Conflict
- Protagonist Macbeth
- Antagonist Macbeth
- The internal conflict with Macbeth was his
vaulting ambition to become and remain king,
which was his tragic flaw. His internal
conflicts led to the external conflicts, which
was war. Macduff and the witches were outside
conflicting forces, resulting in the decisions
that Macbeth had made. Lady Macbeth helped her
husband realize his goal by pushing him into
committing the murder of King Duncan.
7Conflict Resolution
After Macbeth gains power, he becomes paranoid
with the thought that somebody will attempt to
conquer the throne. In order to protect his
Kingship, Macbeth organizes the murders of
numerous people he views as threats. In doing so,
Macbeth wades further and further into a
murderous despotism that he cannot escape. In the
end, Macbeth is killed in battle by his enemy,
Macduff. Macbeth is beheaded, thus ending his
reign of tyranny. As a result, Malcolm is crowned
King and Scotland returns to normal.
8The Corrupting Power and Vaulting Ambition
- The main theme of Macbeth is the destruction that
results when ambition goes unrestrained by moral
restrictions. This is most evident in the plays
two main characters. Macbeth is a courageous
Scottish general who is not naturally inclined to
commit evil deeds, yet he deeply desires power
and advancement. He kills King Duncan against his
better judgment and afterward is beside himself
with guilt and paranoia. Toward the end of the
play he descends into a kind of frantic, arrogant
madness. Lady Macbeth pursues her goals with
greater determination, yet she is less capable of
enduring the repercussions of her immoral acts.
She convinces her husband to kill King Duncan and
urges him to be strong in the events following
the regicide, but she is eventually driven to
suicide by the effect of Macbeths repeated
bloodshed on her conscience. In each case,
ambition is what drives the couple to ever more
terrible atrocities. The problem that the play
suggests is that once one decides to use violence
to further ones quest for power, it is difficult
to stop. There are always potential threats to
the throne, Banquo, Fleance, Macduffand it is
always tempting to use violent means to dispose
of them.
9The Absurdity Irony
- The witches chorus Act I, Scene I, line 10
"Fair is foul, and foul is fair." This is a
paradox. It is also a prophecy, where one thing
seems like another, or about how things will
change through the story like the characters. It
is easier to grasp the meaning of this line as
you progress through this book. This theme is a
subtle theme, but with significant meaning. This
theme is referenced many times throughout the
play.The first thing that Macbeth says when he
enters scene three (line 38) is, "So foul and
fair a day I have not seen. When the witches
said "Fair is foul, and foul is fair," during
scene one, they were referring to the condition
of the day when they meet Macbeth, though
10Characterization
- One of Shakespeare's greatest skills as a
dramatic playwright was his ability to create a
strong interest in major characters very quickly
and to set those major characters in relation to
the play's minor characters, events, and themes.
Shakespeare's skill in characterization is
distinctly shown through his presentation of
both, the minor and major characters. - Lady Macbeth is one of Shakespeares most famous
and frightening female characters. When she is
first introduced in the play she is already
plotting the regicide of King Duncan. Lady
Macbeth is stronger, more ruthless, and more
ambitious than her husband. She seems fully aware
of this and knows that she will have to convince
Macbeth into committing regicide. At one point,
she wishes that she were unsexed of all her
womanly qualities (Act I, scene v, lines 3652),
and that she were not a woman so that she could
commit the murder herself. Shakespeare, however,
seems to use her, and the witches, to emasculate
Macbeths idea that undaunted mettle should
compose / Nothing but males (Act 1. vii.7374).
These women use female methods of achieving
power, which is, manipulation to further their
supposedly male ambitions. Women in the play
can be as ambitious and cruel as men, yet social
constrictions deny them the means to pursue these
ambitions by themselves.
11Quotation 1
- Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow
- Creeps in this petty pace from day to day
- To the last syllable of recorded time.
- And all of our yesterdays have lighted fools
- The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle.
- Lifes but a walking shadow, a poor player
- That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
- And then is heard no more. It is a tale
- Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
- Signifying nothing.
- Act V, Scene V
- In this quote, Macbeth has just found out about
the death of his wife and the attackers
approaching his house. This quote really shows
the growth of Macbeth as a character and
demonstrates how his life was ruined by his
vaulting ambition. This quote can be summed up to
meaning that life has no meaning at all and that
everyone is insignificant in the big picture.
This statement by Macbeth can be seen as a way to
justify his horrible actions because since life
itself is truly meaningless, he can not feel
guilty about the awful things he has done.
12Quotation 2
- Out, damned spot out, I say. One, two why,
then tis time to dot. Hell is murky. Fie, my
lord, fie, a soldier and afeard? What need we
fear who knows it when none can call our power to
account? Yet who would have thought the old man
to have had so much blood in him? - Act V, Scene I
- In this quote, Lady Macbeth is sleep walking and
is trying to rub off the imaginary blood that has
stained her from the murdering of the King. This
quote shows Lady Macbeths conscience about the
murders even though she had called her husband a
coward earlier in the work because of these same
thoughts. For the first time in the play we see
remorse from Lady Macbeth. This quote is
significant because we see that Lady Macbeth has
gone crazy just as Macbeth has because of the
paranoia of being convicted. The reader learns a
lot about Lady Macbeth through this scene and
specifically the quote mentioned.
13DRAMATIC IRONY
- William Shakespeare uses irony in Macbeth to add
to the ambiguous nature of the play, to keep the
audience interested and to add to suspense and
anticipation. - Right before he enters Macbeths castle, where he
is brutally murdered, King Duncan remarks on the
good natured, welcoming feeling he gets as he
approaches the castle. - This castle hath a pleasant seat the air
nimbly and sweetly recommends itself unto
out gentle senses. - Near the end of the play, as tensions rise,
Macbeth bases all of his decisions on the
apparitions of the witches, and clings to them as
his only source of reason this is ironic as his
trust in them is based only on faith the polar
opposite of reason. At the very end of the play,
the apparitions end up hurting him rather than
helping him. Ironically, what he relied on to
save him ended up contributing to his collapse.
14The presence of supernatural forces
- Macbeth provides for much of the plays dramatic
tension and suspense. Several supernatural
apparitions throughout the play profoundly affect
Macbeth and the evil forces eventually claim
Macbeth and destroy his morals. Macbeths
ambition was driven by the prophecies of the
three witches and he was willing to do anything
to assure that they actually transpire. Macbeth
is horrified at the notion of committing
regicide, but he eventually succumbs to the evil
forces and this leads to his downfall. Macbeth
further compromises his honor by arranging the
murder of his best friend, Banquo. Banquo places
Macbeth in a precarious situation he is deeply
entrenched in suspicion and there is no way out.
Macbeths vision of Banquos ghost at a royal
banquet only drives him closer to insanity.