Twenty great Quotes from Shakespeare's Macbeth

 

Twenty great Quotes from Shakespeare's Macbeth

The famous tragedy of William Shakespeare Macbeth is one of William Shakespeare's greatest tragedies. Murder, war, supernatural portents, and all the other elements of a good work drama. Here are a few quotes from Macbeth that has meaning more than they suggest in the drama.

Macbeth is a play written in 1606 by the famous English playwright William Shakespeare, and published for the first time in 1623. Its actors and actresses, following a legend, which forbids pronouncing the word “Macbeth” in a theater, have called it “the Scottish play”.



This play is inspired both by the story of King Macbeth of Scotland, who murdered his predecessor King Duncan, and by the story of King Duffe, who in turn was murdered by a rebellious Scottish lord. The plot cleverly mixes the two stories, making them particularly tragic, and giving them a fantastic and moralizing side.

"The first witch: when the three of us will meet again

Thunder, lightning, or rain?

Second Witch: When hurly-burly's done,

When the war is lost and won. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.1

"Fair dirty and dirty clean."

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.1

"What kind of murderer is that?"

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.2

"No sleep, not even at night

The handle on his pants-room lid. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.3

"He will be weak, peaked, and pine."

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.3

"Strange sister, hand in hand,

Sea and land poster,

Thus go about, about. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.3

"What are these?

So wearing their clothes and so wild,

It does not look like the inhabitants of the earth,

And still 't?'

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.3

"You can test the seeds in time,

And tell me which crops will grow and which will not. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.3

"Not as expected by faith."

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.3

"Tell me, from where?"

Are you indebted to this strange intelligence? Or why

You block our way on this exploding hand

With such prophetic greetings? "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.3

 "What a false heart hides in silence."

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 1.7

"There are beasts in heaven;

Their candles are all out. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 2.1

"It's a dagger that I see before me,

Hand to hand? Come on, touch me

I'm not with you, and I can still see you.

You don't, deadly vision, intelligent

To feel for seeing? Or you but not

An arch of the mind, a false creation,

Working from a heat-stricken brain? "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 2.1

"Somehow in the half-world now

Nature seems dead. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 2.1

"Surely and firmly set the earth,

Don't listen to my footsteps, the way they walk, for fear

Your stones are my stones. "-

William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 2.1



"The bell invites me

Don't listen, Duncan; This is for a knell

That summons you to heaven or hell. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 2.1

"That which made them drunk,

They threw me into the fire.”

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 22

"It is bright, that deadly Bellman,

Which gives stern'st good night. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 22

"Effort and not deed's

Confides us. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 22

"He was not like that

I didn't do that when my dad was sleeping. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 22

"I called the jinn for shelter from the sun,

And the property o 'chan world has now been restored.

Ring the alarm-bell! The wind is blowing! Come on!

At least we would die with the shoe behind us.”

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 5.5

"Scattered around blood and death".

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 5.6

"I live an impressive life."

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 5. 8

"McDuff was from his mother's womb

Incredibly ripped. "

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 5.7

"Lay, Macduff,

And the one who first told her to cry blames her, 'Hold on, that's enough!'

- William Shakespeare, Macbeth, 5.8

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