apostrophe
a figure of speech where the speaker directly addresses an absent person, a dead character, an inanimate object, or an abstract concept
duncan
the rightful, benevolent King of Scotland
killed by macbeth
Ambition
the driving force of the tragedy and the protagonist's fatal flaw
Simile
a figure of speech that directly compares two unlike things using the connecting words "like" or "as" (
Feudalism
a society structured by a decentralized feudal system where power is maintained through a strict hierarchy of land and feudal oaths.
the audience possesses critical information that the characters do not
three weird sisters
supernatural agents of chaos who set the play in motion
Time
the theme of time explores how obsessing over the future destroys your peace, and how disrupting natural order distorts reality
Motif
any repeating element—such as an image, symbol, sound, or idea—that appears throughout a story
gunpowder plot
a failed attempt by a group of English Catholics to assassinate Protestant King James I and blow up the Houses of Parliament
hyperbole
a figure of speech that uses extreme, deliberate exaggeration to create strong emotional impact or emphasize a point
fleance
Banquo’s young son who was prophesied to be king
Handwashing
a powerful visual and psychological motif representing guilt and the inescapable stain of murder
Allusion
a brief, indirect reference to a person, place, thing, or historical, cultural, or literary event
thane
refers to an Anglo-Saxon and Scottish title for a free, high-ranking nobleman who held land directly from the king in exchange for military service and loyalty
(a lord)
paradox
a statement or situation that appears self-contradictory or illogical at first glance
donalbain
the younger son of King Duncan and the brother of Malcolm who flees to ireland after his father's murder
Birds
powerful motif for moral corruption, the breakdown of natural order, and foreshadowing of doom
Aside
a brief, private remark made by a character directly to the audience or to themselves
king james
was a staunch Protestant who disappointed English Catholics by enforcing harsh anti-Catholic laws.
foreshadowing
a literary device where an author drops subtle or explicit hints about events, conflicts, or plot twists that will occur later in the story
macduff
the Thane of Fife, is the heroic avenger and main antagonist to Macbeth who eventually kills macbeth at the end of the play
Mother’s Milk
a powerful motif for the conflict between nurturing innocence and ruthless ambition. Shakespeare uses it to illustrate femininity, maternal duty, and human compassion
alliteration
a literary device in which a series of words in close proximity share the same initial consonant sound
Elizabethan England
macbeth the play reflects the lingering trauma of Queen Elizabeth I's reign, where the lack of a clear heir and constant threats of usurpation shaped English lif