Macbet_ACT_3

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EngelsMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 4

This lesson contains 13 slides, with interactive quiz and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 50 min

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Slide 1 - Slide

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Slide 2 - Slide

crazy, deranged, enthusiastic
Act 3, scene i
Read pages 85 and 87. 
How does the beginning of  Act 3 (scene i) set the mood of this Act (Act 3)?
Is there any foreshadowing in theses two pages? 
What is being foreshadowed? How do you know? 
What stylistic feature(s) does Shakespeare use in these two pages? 

Slide 3 - Slide

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circular structure

Slide 4 - Slide

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Act 3, scene i. Macbeth's soliloquy.
How does Macbeth's soliloquy on page 89 reveal the change in the attitude of Macbeth towards murder? 
' To be the king is nothing if I'm not safe as the king.
I'm very afraid of Banquo. There's something noble
...............
... I will challenge fate to battle and fight to the 
death. who's there!' (Act 3, scene i, p.89)

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Act III, scene ii
Read pages 97, 99, 101. How does Shakespeare use animal imagery to set unsettling mood? 

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Pages 99 and 101

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Second murderer: Here comes a light! Here comes a light!
Third murderer: Who put out the light? (III, iii)  (p. 105)

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Film: 1:19 - 1:24

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Act 3, scene 4
Macbeth: I will walk around and mingle with all of you, playing the humble host. My wife will stay in her royal chair, but at the appropriate time I will have her welcome you all. (III, iv) 
  1. To show that Macbeth's hospitality is 'fake', Shakespeare uses dramatic irony. Find and explain examples of dramatic irony in Act 3, scene 4. 
  2. Extract analysis, act 3, scene 4; pp 119 - 120.  Analyse pages 119 and 121. 
Write a short paragraph explaining the meaning of pages 119 and 121; include references to textual features. 

Slide 10 - Slide

MACBETH There’s an old saying: the dead will have their revenge.
Gravestones have been known to move, and trees
to speak, to bring guilty men to justice. The craftiest
murderers have been exposed by the mystical signs
made by crows and magpies. How late at night is it?
LADY MACBETH It’s almost morning. You can’t tell whether it’s day or
night.
MACBETH What do you think about the fact that Macduff
refuses to come to me when I command him?
LADY MACBETH Did you send for him, sir?
MACBETH I’ve heard about this indirectly, but I will send for
him. .....   I have walked so far into this
river of blood that even if I stopped now, it would be
as hard to go back to being good as it is to keep killing
people. 
 (III, iv, pp 119, 121

Extract analysis, act 3, scene 4; pp 119 - 120. Analyse pages 119 and 121. Write a short paragraph explaining the meaning of pages 119 and 121; include references to textual features.

Slide 11 - Open question

MACBETH There’s an old saying: the dead will have their revenge.
Gravestones have been known to move, and trees
to speak, to bring guilty men to justice. The craftiest
murderers have been exposed by the mystical signs
made by crows and magpies. How late at night is it?
LADY MACBETH It’s almost morning. You can’t tell whether it’s day or
night.
MACBETH What do you think about the fact that Macduff
refuses to come to me when I command him?
LADY MACBETH Did you send for him, sir?
MACBETH I’ve heard about this indirectly, but I will send for
him. ..... I have walked so far into this
river of blood that even if I stopped now, it would be
as hard to go back to being good as it is to keep killing
people.
 (III, iv, pp 119, 121

As you all know, security / Is mortals' chiefest enemy. 
As you all know, overconfidence is man's greatest enemy. (III, v)

Slide 12 - Slide

Start reading from: 
Hecate: Don't I have a reason to be angry, you disobedient hags? How dare you ...... As you all know, overconfidence is man's greatest enemy.' (pp 124 - 125)
What does Act 3, scene 6 foreshadow? 
How does Shakespeare build contrast between the characters of Macbeth and Macduff ? 
Bridge scene
Universality
read pp 127 , 129

Slide 13 - Slide

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