“Oh, treachery! /run, good Fleance,/Run, run, run! Avenge me later! Farewell!”
“Out, damned spot. Out, I say!”
“Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow / creeps in this petty pace from day to day.”
“Who struck out the light?”
“I have done no harm. But I remember now / I am in this earthly world, where to do harm / Is often praiseworthy, to do good sometimes / Is dangerous foolishness.”
“Tooth of wolf, and dragon’s scale, / witches’ mummy, eye and nail, / parts of hungry salt-sea shark, / root of hemlock dug in the dark.”
“[I] was taken / from [my] mother’s womb prematurely. / I was not born in the normal way.”
“Duncan trusts me for several reasons. / I am his kinsman and his subject. / I am also his host.”
“O, full of scorpions is my mind, dear wife!”
“Some I see / Wear two crowns and carry three scepters. / Horrible sight! They all resemble Banquo. / Now I see it is true. They will all be kings.”
What are the three titles the Witches call Macbeth by when they first meet?
Describe two of the ways the predictions made by the apparitions come true.
What is Macbeth's greatest flaw?
Why does Macduff go to England?
Why is Siward so calm about the death of his son?
“I’ll go to England.”
“Fight on, Macduff, / And cursed be he that first cries, 'Stop, enough!’”
“I will surprise Macduff’s castle: / I will give the edge of the sword / to his wife, his babies, and any unlucky relatives / who might happen to be there at the time.”
"She always does that. It looks as if she is washing her hands."
“Sit, worthy friends; / My lord is often like this, / and has been since his youth. / Please stay seated. / The fit is temporary; in a moment / he will again be well
Describe Lady Macbeth's state of mind towards the end of the story.
“Is this a dagger which I see before me, / The handle towards my hand? / Come, let me clutch you.”
Give three examples of when Macbeth is unable to be happy with what he already has.
What are the three predictions made by the Visions the second time Macbeth visits the witches?
"Be brave as a lion, and be proud. Do not worry about your enemies."
Banquo, said to his son as he is being murdered.
Lady Macbeth, said in her sleep due to her guilty feelings
Macbeth, said after his wife has died.
Murderer, said because Fleance escaped in the confusion
Lady Macduff, said as murderers are coming to her house to kill her family
Witches, said while they are making a spell to summon the visions
Macduff, said to Macbeth before he kills him, explaining that he was not born of woman and can harm Macbeth
Macbeth, said while trying to decide if he should kill Duncan
Macbeth, said to Lady Macbeth because he is upset Banquo's descendants will be king. Shows his dissatisfaction with life.
Macbeth, said as he sees the vision of Banquo's many descendants, also referenced King James I.
Thane of Glamis, Thane of Cawdor, and King
Macduff kills Macbeth, the English army cuts down the wood and moves to Dunsinane, and Macduff was born by c-section
ambition and/or never happy with what he has
To help Malcolm and run from Macbeth
He feels his son died the best possible way, honorably in battle.
Malcolm, said after his father is killed and the sons know they have to escape.
Macbeth, when he decides to fight Macduff at the end of the play instead of surrendering
Macbeth, said after the Visions tell him to beware Macduff and he discovers Macduff has escaped.
Lady Macbeth's servant, gentlewoman, said while Lady Macbeth is sleepwalking and dreaming her hands are covered in blood.
Lady Macbeth, said as Macbeth is acting crazy at his dinner party because of Banquo's ghost.
Lady Macbeth begins to go crazy and feels very guilty.
Macbeth, said as he hallucinates a dagger before he kills Duncan
Answer to be determined by Ms. Connelly
Beware Macduff, Macbeth cannot be defeated until the woods move to his castle, and he cannot be harmed by anyone born from a woman.
Vision, said to Macbeth before he tells him he can't be defeated until a wood moves to his castle.