Tuesday 18 October 2011

Reading LOg

Scene I:

  • Typical gothic weather of “Thunder and lightning” this weather is common within Shakespeare and immediately alerts the audience to nature of play.
  • The presence of the witches and subject matter they discuss themselves. “When the battles lost and won”
  • Despite the title of play the fact that we do not meet the eponymous character and instead hear accounts and references to him, builds him up to be someone special and automatically gives Macbeth that aura of mystery
  • Use of stichomythia speeds up dialogue creating sense of urgency
Scene II:
·         Many references to blood- captain’s description
·         This scene again creates sense of mystery around Macbeth and puts him on a pedestal as a man of bravery- “Brave Macbeth”
·         Also alludes to prophecy of witches “What he hath lost noble Macbeth hath won” foreshadowing the next scene.

Scene III:

  • Witches prophecy parallels with the foreshadowing earlier.
  • Also setting with the thunder and rain and Macbeth and Banquo fresh from battle

Scene IV:

  • Dramatic irony with trusting Macbeth despite Macbeth’s plans to kill him already ‘He was a gentleman on whom I built an absolute trust.’
  • ‘Our duties are to your throne…’ ties in with “Be the snake underneath”- constant imagery of two sides to a person within play and displaying the evil within
Scene V:
·         Lady Macbeth’s dominance and calling on evil spirits “Unsex me here”
·         Her plans to kill Duncan already forming and her looking down upon “The milk of human English”
Scene VI:

  • This scene sets up Scene VII – Lady Macbeth presents that she is two faced, or just a very clever woman. ‘We rest your hermits.’

Gothic Elements of Macbeth in Act One

The gothic elements of Macbeth are obvious from the opening scene and setting of the witches, instantly putting the play into a dark light and making it clear to the audience of the supernatural and gothic elements which run throughout the play. The presence of the witches automatically does this but their speech adds to it. The witches speaking only in rhyme “Fair is foul and foul is fair,” alluding to spells and trickery therefore overcastting the play with unease. The subject matter of the witches’ speech also keeps in the tradition of gothic, with images of war throughout: “When the battle’s lost and won,” making it apparent from the offset the evil nature of the play.
The first meeting of Lady Macbeth also keeps up with elements of the gothic, with her calling upon the evil spirits to “unsex me here.” This call would shock audiences as Lady Macbeth is obviously not a typical woman. This act quickly denotes the evil within her, due to her attempting to rid herself of goodness and fill herself with evil. Lady Macbeth’s language also adds to this with her proclaiming Macbeth is “Too full of the milk of human kindness,” as if it were a bad thing.
The fact the play opens with a question “When shall we three meet again?” and prophecies add to the gothic, as this denotes the fact the events seem to be out of the control of the characters casting a sense of dramatic irony over the act.
The elements of the gothic are also strewn throughout with the settings of castles and long empty moors and the harsh weather.