2. Macbeth It will have blood they say: blood will have blood.” –Macbeth 3.4. 152-53
3. What does it mean? Macbeth sees Banquo at the feast and starts to freak out because he is feeling guilty about first killing King Duncan then his once best friend Banquo.
5. My Quote “Out, damned spot! Out, I say!” Lady Macbeth 5:1,26-40
6. What was happening while the quote was said ? When Lady Macbeth said, “Out damned spot, out I say!” She was sleepwalking and a gentlewoman and her doctor listen in as she has an imaginary conversation. Lady Macbeth was also feeling guilty like Macbeth.
8. "Lay on,Macduff, and damned be him that first cries hold enough." Macbeth has given up, yet of pride decides to go to war. He wants to die as a soldier, not a coward.
9. What this means This means that there is a lot of blood from king Duncan on Macbeth’s hands and will all of the water wash it from his hands.
17. My Quote “ Come, you spirits That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here.” - Lady Macbeth, 1.5.44-5
18. What does it mean? Lady Macbeth isn’t sure that there’s enough manhood to go around herself and her husband, so she calls upon scheming spirits to “unsex me here”. This is her way of asking to strip her of feminine weakness and with invested masculine resolve.
22. Macbeth “Yet do I fear thy nature. It is too o’ the milk of human kindness.”-lady macbeth,1.5.15-6
23. Macbeth The quote: “yet do I fear thy nature. It is too o’ the milk of human kindness.” Macbeth,1.5.15-6. Lady Macbeth is pushy, and fears that her milky husband lacks the nerve to grab the Scottish crown in the most cruel manner. "The nearest way," as she sees it, is to murder King Duncan. Predict that he would be created "thane“of Cawdor, and later would rise the throne.
26. MYQUOTE “Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under ‘t.” ----Lady Macbeth, 1.5.73--4
27. “Look like the innocent flower, but be the serpent under ‘t.” --Lady Macbeth, 1.5.73-4 Lady Macbeth convinces Macbeth to change his mind. The effect of this will be to lose human reasoning completely, a fact that is not known yet to the uninformed Lady.