Act I – Scene I:
· Witches planning – what about?
· Who is Macbeth? Why are the witches interested in him?
· Enigmatic opening.
· “Thunder and Lightening” = Gothic weather – pathetic fallacy
· Begins with a question.
· Stichomythia
· “Fair if foul, and foul is fair” – alliteration – good and bad
· Foreshadowing the rest of the play?
· Allows interpretation.
Act I – Scene II:
· Stage directions “Bleeding Captain” – the audience is drawn to this, blood = Gothic.
· “What bloody man is that?” – Another reference to blood.
· “Brave Macbeth” – the reader/audience learn more about Macbeth, he has to earn his respect (he won the battle). Glorifying him by describing how he killed others – “Brandished steel”
· “Execution” – makes it appear that the opposition in the war did not bother to fight back.
· “unseamed him” Macbeth does not stop at just killing him, he decapitates him – “fixing his head upon our battlements”
· The captain is dying – is he a reliable source? Not seeing things straight? Distorted vision?
· It’s not about the winning, it’s how you win.
· Macbeth is seen as a great warrior.
· “Cannons overcharged” = the soldiers are eager.
· “Doubly redoubled” = mimics the sounds of the swords striking, and the amount of times they strike – a lot.
· Macbeth gains the title, showing he is honourable and had valour.
Act I – Scene III:
· The witches’ prophesy, over Macbeth’s future.
· When the witches meet Macbeth, they know and use his name – he is confused and shocked by this, as well as them calling him Thane of Cawdor.
· This can be interpreted differently – AO3 – alternate views.
· Ross makes Macbeth and Thane – by suggesting it.
· Macbeth struggles with temptation – Banquo argues not to.
· Macbeth – fear, self-doubt, confused.
· Puzzled Macbeth thinks through the possibilities, and hopefully plots.
· “cannot be ill, cannot be good”
· Whose murder yet is but fantastical”
· ‘Fantastical’ is it real or imaginary?
· Comical interpretation?
· Rhythmic.
· The three witches are always together – one entity – chanting together
· Multiple personality disorder?
· Not people but a force.
· 3 witches represent the past, present and future.
· 1st witch – uses nursery rhyme – which can be scary.
· Macbeth has fast speaking patterns
· No set pace but it is deemed as a quick scene – a lot of rhetorical questions.
· Stichomythia – fast moving conversation.
· It’s not what he says, it’s how he says it.
Act I – Scene IV:
· What is Gothic about Macbeth in Act I?
· The king has no reason not to trust Macbeth – Ironic.
· “Our duties are to your throne...”
· “let not light see my black and deep desires”
· Do or die situation – leave, accept or go for it opportunity.
· Poetic rhythm, Shakespeare changes the tone of the play – similar to the chanting of the witches.
· Prose to poetry.
· Prolepsis.
· Macbeth is associated with trust; however his planned speech reveals how he really feels.
Act I – Scene V:
· Lady Macbeth – we question her motives and sanity.
· Lady Macbeth plants the seed of thought/train of thought into Macbeth – on the murder of the king – shows her dominance over him.
· The king is coming – kill the king.
· Gothic language – “Raven”, “blood”, and “Croaks” - the language reflects her evil.
· Does she have or oppose a moral dilemma?
· “Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark” – doesn’t want God to see/ know of what her plans entail – sense of guilt?
· “Look like the innocent flower, But be the serpent under’t” – reference to religion (Adam and Eve) they’re hiding their true identity.
· The letter are the beginning of the scene, symbolises secrecy.
· Lady Macbeth and Macbeth – two sides of the same person – Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde? “Doppelganger”?
· No build up to greatness like Macbeth – the first time we see her she is true and evil.
· No ambiguity when reading or seeing Lady Macbeth.
· Lady Macbeth has dominance over this scene because she has the most lines – “leave the rest to me”
· She is his catalyst?
· Macbeth and Lady Macbeth have the same ideas – however he is not as open about it – “deep desires”
· Lady Macbeth doesn’t want to feel remorse?
· She’s determined to follow through
· Masculine lines – ‘battlements’ – Gothic
· “Innocent flower” society’s rules, links to Lamia, Femme Fatal - women lead men astray?
· Links to Adam and Eve – Eve eats fruit and gets them both chucked out.
· Empowering or manipulative?
· Lady Macbeth and Macbeth are the same entity – same name, same personality, same lifestyle?
· Repressed feminism?
· The scene consists of Lady Macbeth’s opinion and personality.
· The letter pre-plans the kings death, shows Lady Macbeth's true nature, as she becomes arrogant.
· “metaphysical aid” and “fate” oxymoron
· Megalomania behaviour?
· Parent and child behaviour, Lady Macbeth looks down upon Macbeth.
· Sexual death and erotic seduction.
· Lady Macbeth is Gothic; it shows us the side of human nature that we don’t want to accept.
· She is the brains over his brawn.
· Her tongue is her weapon.
· Duality?
Act I – Scene VI/VII:
· Macbeth discusses intent of murder – justifies killing the king.
· “Ambitious” soliloquy shows that he is just as outgoing as Lady Macbeth; it makes her look less evil.
· He’s not weak, he just has a conscience.
· Lady Macbeth questions his masculinity.
· She twists innocence into a framework for evil. “His boneless gums. And dashed his brains out”
· Dark Irony?
· Macbeth enters alone – means that he does not have to hide how he feels – he can express everything freely.
· Double meanings – “Bloody” can be a literal, or cursing.
· Plague – incessant and painful.
· “New-born babe” – implies innocence.
· “Falls on the other” – he predicts his own end.
· “Horrid deed” knows what he is doing/planning.
· Lady Macbeth = passionate -‘thy love’
· He begins to retreat from the idea of murder, showing that he has a conscience -“No Further in this business”
· Lady Macbeth is manipulative – blackmail – “Valour” twists the idea of bravery, similar to the twisting of innocence.
· “be so much more the man” – she questions his masculinity, which he has already proved – insulting his manhood.
· “I have given suck” – post traumatic stress disorder? Dead children.
· “Boneless gums” again twisting the idea of purity.
· Lady Macbeth: “swinish sleep” – she shows the pure essence of evil, as the king has done nothing to wrong her in any way.
· Macbeth – revitalized “men-children only!” – The punctuation shows this – fear of his wife?
· “False face must hide what the false heart doth know” – links to Dorian Gray – hiding personality, aesthetics.
End of Act notes/review:
· Prophecy = an aspect of the Gothic, foundation of the Gothic and the characters build on it.
· Scheming of the murder is Gothic by Lady Macbeth
· Not romantic, it is a strong bond between Lady Macbeth and Macbeth
· Moral dilemma, character indecision?
· Summoning of evil – Lady Macbeth and the witches call to a higher power
· Lady Macbeth and Macbeth – have a strong bond – which alienates them from society.
· The letters have a Gothic influence on the audience; it strikes a fear of the unknown as it is not coming directly from one person.
· The twisting of innocence “dashed his brains out”
· Subverting gender roles of Lady Macbeth and Macbeth.
· Rhyme – it is spell like, witches and Lady Macbeth
Very good comments. You are making concise but perceptive points. Line refernces will help you find quotations later. It's good that you keep making reference to the gothic.
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