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Macbeth: Key Quotes and Analysis for GCSE Literature QUESTIONS WITH WELL VERIFIED ANSWERS Witches - answer☑️️..[Thunder and lightning] When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in rain? (Act 1 scene 1) Weather disturbance - answer☑️

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Macbeth: Key Quotes and Analysis for GCSE Literature QUESTIONS WITH WELL VERIFIED ANSWERS Witches - answer☑️️..[Thunder and lightning] When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in rain? (Act 1 scene 1) Weather disturbance - answer☑️️..Reflects evil and disruptive nature of witches which creates a sense of doom. Hurly-burly - answer☑️️..Strange language also heightens eeriness. Fair is foul, and foul is fair - answer☑ ️️..Hover through the fog and filthy air. (1.1) Trochaic tetrameter - answer☑️️..Used to heighten spooky and mysterious atmosphere and further establishes supernatural theme.

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Macbeth: Key Quotes And Analysis For GCSE Literatu
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Macbeth: Key Quotes and Analysis for GCSE Literatu

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Macbeth: Key Quotes and Analysis for GCSE Literature
QUESTIONS WITH WELL VERIFIED ANSWERS
Witches - answer☑️✔️..[Thunder and lightning] When shall we three meet again In thunder,
lightning, or in rain? (Act 1 scene 1)



Weather disturbance - answer☑️✔️..Reflects evil and disruptive nature of witches which
creates a sense of doom.



Hurly-burly - answer☑️✔️..Strange language also heightens eeriness.



Fair is foul, and foul is fair - answer☑️✔️..Hover through the fog and filthy air. (1.1)



Trochaic tetrameter - answer☑️✔️..Used to heighten spooky and mysterious atmosphere and
further establishes supernatural theme.



Juxtaposition phrase - answer☑️✔️..'Fair is foul and foul is fair' alludes to how the witches
violate the natural order.



Double, Double, toil and trouble - answer☑️✔️..Fire burn and cauldron bubble (4.1)



Choral chants - answer☑️✔️..Reassert the horror of the witches through trochaic tetrameter
and rhyming couplets.



By the pricking of my thumb - answer☑️✔️..Something wicked this way comes.



Invisible connection - answer☑️✔️..Suggests that Macbeth and the witches have a strong hold
of evil on him.

,Dehumanization - answer☑️✔️..The use of the pronoun 'something' portrays Macbeth as
subhuman by the witches.



Macbeth's first line - answer☑️✔️..'So foul and fair a day I have not seen.' (1.3)



Parallel between Macbeth and witches - answer☑️✔️..Creates a connection that conveys
Macbeth's supernatural link with them.



Tell me more - answer☑️✔️..The use of the imperative 'tell' implies Macbeth's hidden desires
to become king.



This supernatural soliciting - answer☑️✔️..Cannot be ill, cannot be good (1.3).



Lawyerly arguments - answer☑️✔️..Shows how Macbeth tries to justify what is clearly a bad
idea.



Whose horrid image - answer☑️✔️..Doth unfix my hair and make my seated heart knock at my
ribs.



Against the use of nature - answer☑️✔️..Links to the Jacobean belief that regicide is an act
against natural order.



Shakes so my single state of man - answer☑️✔️..Function is smothered in surmise, and
nothing is but what is not (1.3).



Ambition growing - answer☑️✔️..The objectifying of the Prince of Cumberland as an obstacle
shows Macbeth's dehumanization.

, Stars, hide your fires - answer☑️✔️..Let not light see my black and deep desires (1.4).



Perverts Duncan's comparison - answer☑️✔️..Of nobility to stars, modifying the laudatory
language.



Burned in desire - answer☑️✔️..'Rapt in the wonder of it' (1.5).



Powerful verb 'burned' - answer☑️✔️..Hints at Macbeth's determination and eagerness for
power.



My dearest partner of greatness - answer☑️✔️..'Dearest' demonstrates how caring Macbeth is
towards his wife.



Noun 'greatness' - answer☑️✔️..Showcases how Macbeth upholds his wife to high standards.



Ingredience of our poison'd chalice - answer☑️✔️..Metaphor for their murderous schemes
which forms the 'poison' representing the evil caused by Macbeth's actions.



Chalice - answer☑️✔️..Metaphor for power and the crown, foreshadowing the bloodthirsty
reign leading to Macbeth's death.



Warning to Jacobean audience - answer☑️✔️..Stresses the importance of the divine right of
kings and the consequences of rebellion.



Ecclesiastical imagery - answer☑️✔️..Use of 'chalice' as a vessel for drinking blessed wine,
highlighting the sacredness of the object.

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Macbeth: Key Quotes and Analysis for GCSE Literatu

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