‘Thou hast it now: king, Cawdor, Glamis, all,’ | S1, L1, Banquo |
‘I fear / Thou played’st most foully for ‘t’ | S1, L2, Banquo |
‘May they not be my oracles as well, / And set me up in hope?’ | S1, L9, Banquo |
‘But hush, no more.’ | S1, L10, Banquo |
‘I’ll request your presence’ | S1, L15, Macbeth, to Banquo |
‘Let your highness / Command upon me’ | S1, L15, Banquo |
‘Ride you this afternoon?’ | S1, L19, Macbeth |
‘We hear our bloody cousins are bestowed / In England and in Ireland’ | S1, L30, Macbeth |
‘Goes Fleance with you?’ | S1, L36, Macbeth |
‘To make society / The sweeter welcome’ | S1, L42, Macbeth |
‘To be thus is nothing, / But to be safely thus’ | S1, L48, Macbeth |
‘Our fears in Banquo / Stick deep’ | S1, L49, Macbeth |
‘ ‘Tis much he [Banquo] dares [may overthrow me]’ | S1, L51, Macbeth |
‘There is none but he [Banquo] / Whose being I do fear’ | S1, L54, Macbeth |
‘He [Banquo] chid the sisters’ | S1, L57, Macbeth |
‘Upon my head they placed a fruitless crown’ | S1, L61, Macbeth |
‘[The Witches] put a barren scepter in my hand’ | S1, L62, Macbeth |
‘the gracious Duncan I have murdered’ | S1, L66, Macbeth |
‘make them kings, the son of Banquo kings!’ | S1, L70, Macbeth |
‘come fate into the list, / And champion me to th’ utterance’ | S1, L71, Macbeth |
‘Was it not yesterday we spoke together?’ | S1, L74, Macbeth, to First Murderer |
‘Know / That it was he [Banquo]’ | S1, L76, Macbeth, to First Murderer |
‘We are men, my liege’ | S1, L91, First Murderer |
‘I will put that business in your bosoms’ | S1, L104, Macbeth |
‘[Our] health [is] but sickly in his [Banquo’s] life’ | S1, L107 |
‘I am reckless what / I do to spite the world’ | S1, L110, First Murderer |
‘Both of you / Know Banquo was your enemy’ | S1, L114, Macbeth |
‘Masking the business from the common eye’ | S1, L125, Macbeth |
‘Fleance … // … must embrace the fate’ | S1, L135, Macbeth |
‘[Fleance’s] absence is no less material to me’ | S1, L136, Macbeth |
‘We are resolved’ | S1, L139, Murderers |
‘It is concluded’ | S1, L141, Macbeth |
‘Banquo, thy soul’s flight, / If it find heaven, must find it out tonight’ | S1, L142, Macbeth |
‘Is Banquo gone from court? | S2, L1, Lady Macbeth |
‘Naught’s had, all’s spent’ | S2, L6, Lady Macbeth |
‘ ‘Tis safer to be that which we destroy’ | S2, L8, Lady Macbeth |
‘Doubtful joy’ | S2, L9, Lady Macbeth |
‘Why do you [Macbeth] keep alone?’ | S2, L10, Lady Macbeth |
‘What’s done is done’ | S2, L14, Lady Macbeth |
‘We have scorched the snake, not killed it’ | S2, L15, Macbeth |
‘sleep / In the affliction of these terrible dreams’ | S2, L19, Macbeth |
‘Better be with the dead’ | S2, L21, Macbeth |
‘we, to gain our peace, have sent to peace’ | S2, L22, Macbeth |
‘Duncan is in his grave. / After life’s fitful fever he sleeps well. // … nothing / Can touch him further’ | S2, L24, Macbeth |
‘Be bright and jovial / Among your guests tonight’ | S2, L29, Lady Macbeth |
‘Let your remembrance / Apply to Banquo [but he will never attend]’ | S2, L31, Macbeth, to Lady Macbeth |
‘Oh, full of scorpions is my mind, dear wife!’ | S2, L37, Macbeth |
‘they are assailable [killable]’ | S2, L40, Macbeth |
‘there shall be done / A deed of dreadful note’ | S2, L44, Macbeth |
‘What’s to be done?’ | S2, L45, Lady Macbeth |
‘Come, seeling night’ | S2, L47, Macbeth |
‘copy’ ‘bond’ | S2, L39, Lady MacbethS2, L50, Macbeth |
‘Good things of day begin to droop and drowse’ | S2, L53, Macbeth |
‘Things bad begun make strong themselves by ill. / So, prithee, go with me.’ | S2, L56, Macbeth |
‘But who bid thee join with us?’ | S3, L1, First Murderer |
‘It will be rain tonight.Let it come down.’ | S3, L18, Banquo, First Murderer |
‘Oh treachery!’ | S3, L18, Banquo |
‘Fly, good Fleance, fly, fly, fly!’ | S3, L18, Banquo |
‘There’s but one down. The son is fled’ | S3, L21, Third Murderer |
‘let’s away and say how much is done’ | S3, L23, First Murderer |
‘Ourself with mingle with society’ | S4, L3, Macbeth |
‘[I will] play the humble host’ | S4, L4, Macbeth |
‘my heart speaks they are welcome’ | S4, L8, Lady Macbeth |
‘There’s blood upon thy face’ | S4, L12, Macbeth |
‘Fleance is ‘scaped’ | S4, L20, First Murderer |
‘Then comes my fit again’ | S4, L21, Macbeth |
‘I had else been perfect’ | S4, L21, Macbeth |
‘But Banquo’s safe?’ | S4, L25, Macbeth |
‘There the grown serpent [Banquo] lies’ | S4, L29, Macbeth |
‘My royal lord, / You do not give the cheer’ | S4, L33, Lady Macbeth |
‘The table’s full’ | S4, L46, Macbeth |
‘Thou canst not say I did it’ | S4, L50, Macbeth |
‘Never shake / Thy gory locks at me’ | S4, L50, Macbeth |
‘My lord is often thus’ | S4, L53, Lady Macbeth |
‘Are you a man?”Ay, and a bold one’ | S4, L58, Lady Macbeth, Macbeth |
‘This is the very painting of your fear’ | S4, L61, Lady Macbeth |
‘When all’s done, / You look but on a stool’ | S4, L68, Lady Macbeth |
‘Prithee, see there!’ | S4, L69, Macbeth |
‘But now they rise again’ | S4, L80, Macbeth |
‘Come, love and health to all’ | S4, L87, Macbeth |
‘Would he [Banquo] were here!’ | S4, L91, Macbeth |
‘Avaunt, and quit my sight!’ | S4, L93, Macbeth |
‘What man dare, I dare’ | S4, L99, Macbeth |
‘Why so, being gone, / I am a man again’ | S4, L108, Macbeth |
‘you can behold such sights’ | S4, L114, Macbeth, to Lady Macbeth |
‘Stand not upon the order of your going, / But go at once’ | S4, L119, Lady Macbeth |
‘Blood will have blood’ | S4, L122, Macbeth |
‘Stones have been known to move, and trees to speak’ | S4, L123, Macbeth |
‘Macduff denies his person / At our great bidding’ | S4, L128, Macbeth |
‘I keep a servant fee’d [in all my Lord’s houses]’ | S4, L132, Macbeth |
‘I will tomorrow – / … to the weird sisters’ | S4, L132, Macbeth |
‘For mine own good, / All causes shall give way’ | S4, L135, Macbeth |
‘the season of all natures, sleep’ | S4, L141, Lady Macbeth |
‘My strange and self-abuse’ | S4, L142, Macbeth |
‘We are but young in deed’ | S4, L144, Macbeth |
‘My former speeches have but hit your thoughts’ | S6, L1, Lennox |
‘The gracious Duncan / Was pitied of Macbeth [sarcastic]’ | S6, L3, Lennox |
‘if ‘t please you, Fleance killed [Banquo]’ [sarcastic] | S6, L6, Lennox |
‘Men must not walk too late’ | S6, L7, Lennox |
‘how monstrous / It was for Malcolm and for Donalbain / To kill their gracious father?’ [sarcastic] | S6, L8, Lennox |
‘How it [Duncan’s murder] did grieve Macbeth!’ | S6, L11, Lennox |
‘Was not that [killing the servants] nobly done?’ [sarcastic] | S6, L14, Lennox |
‘ ‘t would have angered any heart alive / To hear the men [the servants] deny ‘t [Duncan’s murder]’ [sarcastic] | S6, L15, Lennox |
‘I say / He [Macbeth] has borne all things well’ [sarcastic] | S6, L16, Lennox |
‘I hear / Macduff lives in disgrace’ [sarcastic] | S6, L22, Lennox |
‘Sir, can you tell / Where he [Macduff] bestows himself?’ | S6, L23, Lennox |
‘this tyrant holds the due of birth [from Malcolm]’ | S6, L25, Lord |
‘[Malcolm] is received / Of the most pious Edward with such grace’ – contrast with oxymoronic ‘pious rage’ | S6, L26, Lord |
‘To wake Northumberland and warlike Siward’ | S6, L31, Lord |
‘we may again / Give to our tables meat, …’ | S6, L33, Lord |
‘he [Macbeth] / Prepares for some attempt of war’ | S6, L38, Lord |
‘ ‘Sir, [Macbeth] not I [Macduff]’ ‘ | S6, L41, Lord |
‘Advise him [Macduff] to a caution’ | S6, L45, Lennox |
‘May soon return to this our suffering country / Under a hand accursed!’ | S6, L49, Lennox |
‘pious Edward’, ‘Some holy angel /Fly … to England’, ‘I’ll send my prayers’ | S6, Lord |
Macbeth Act 3
November 10, 2019