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Macbeth Act 1

Published on Mar 15, 2016

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PRESENTATION OUTLINE

ACT 1

ACT 1 SCENE 1

  • Dark stormy night
  • Three witches meet
  • Plan to meet Macbeth
  • Decide on the Heath.

SCENE 2

  • The Scottish army is at war with the Norwegian army.
  • Duncan, king of Scotland, meets a captain returning from battle.
  • Thane of Cawdor has sided with Norway
  • Duncan decides to execute the disloyal thane and give the title of Cawdor to Macbeth.

SCENE 3

  • The Witches meet on the heath and wait for Macbeth.
  • The witches hail him
  • the witches vanish into thin air.
  • Ross and Angus appear with the news

SCENE 4

  • Duncan demands to know whether the former Thane of Cawdor has been executed.
  • His son Malcolm assures him he witnessed the Thane’s death
  • He announces his decision to make Malcolm the heir to the throne of Scotland
  • Duncan then states that he plans to visit Macbeth at his home.
  • Macbeth heads home to prepare.

SCENE 5

  • Lady Macbeth reads a letter from Macbeth
  • He explains his encounter with the witches
  • She then implores him to hurry home so that she can convince to perform the murder he must commit
  • a messenger arrives with the news that Duncan is coming
  • Lady Macbeth calls on the heavenly powers
  • Macbeth arrives
  • She preps dinner and the Kings death.

SCENE 6

  • Duncan arrives Inverness with Banquo
  • The king ask for Macbeth's whereabouts.
  • She offers to bring him to where Macbeth awaits.

SCENE 7

  • Macbeth agonizes over whether to kill Duncan
  • He struggles in particular with the idea of murdering a man
  • Macbeth tells his wife that he "will proceed no further in this business."
  • She taunts him
  • She advised a plan
  • Macbeth is astonished by her cruelty but resigns to follow through with her plans.

QUOTE ANALYSIS

  • "fair is foul and foul is fair" three witches
  • Everything we delight in is evil to other beings and vise versa
  • So foul and fair a day I have not seen
  • The day is foul due to the witches raising a storm, and fair because of Macbeth's victories on the battlefield.
  • too full o' th' milk of human kindness
  • too kind by nature to do what needs to be done