Plot Act 1
Plot Act 2
Context
Quote
Lucky Dip
100

What prophecy do the witches give Banquo?

He will not be king but will father a line of kings

100

What vision does Macbeth see before the murder of killing Duncan?

Dagger

100

What was the Divine Right of Kings?

The belief that monarchs were appointed by God and accountable only to Him.

100

What does “Fair is foul, and foul is fair” suggest?

Moral inversion and the instability of appearances.

100

How is masculinity presented as unstable?

It is repeatedly questioned and weaponised; manhood is tied to violence rather than virtue.

200

Why does Duncan order the execution of the Thane of Cawdor?

He betrayed Scotland by siding with the Norwegian army

200

Why does Lady Macbeth not kill Duncan herself?

He resembles her father as he slept, suggesting suppressed conscience or emotional hesitation.

200

How might the Gunpowder Plot have influenced the play?

It heightened fears about treason and regicide, making Macbeth’s crime politically resonant and cautionary.

200

What does “Stars, hide your fires” reveal about Macbeth?

He recognises his desires as “black and deep” and wants to conceal them from moral scrutiny.

200

In what ways is Macbeth a tragic hero in Acts 1 and 2?

He is noble, respected, and fatally flawed by ambition; he is aware of the moral consequences yet chooses wrongly.

300

Why does Maclolm's appointment as Prince of Cumberland create conflict for Macbeth?

It places clear obstacles in his path to the throne, forcing him to have to act.

300

How does Shakespeare use the Porter scene to shift the tone after Duncan’s murder?

Through dark comedy and references to hell and equivocation, providing momentary relief while reinforcing the idea that Macbeth’s castle has become a metaphorical hell.

300

Why would King James I have been interested in the witches?

He believed in witchcraft, wrote Daemonologie, and oversaw witch trials, making the supernatural politically relevant.

300

How does Lady Macbeth manipulate Macbeth in “When you durst do it, then you were a man”?

She equates masculinity with violence, attacking his identity to coerce him.

300

How would a Jacobean audience felt about Lady Macbeth so far?

Disgust/dislike/distrust in her blurring of moral lines and emasculation of Macbeth

400

How does Shakespeare structurally move Macbeth from passive recipient of prophecy to active conspirator by the end of Act 1?

Through asides and soliloquies that reveal internal ambition

400

How does Macbeth’s reaction immediately after the murder reveal that guilt precedes consequence?

He hears voices (“Sleep no more”), cannot say “Amen,” fixates on blood, and speaks in fragmented syntax — showing psychological torment before any external punishment.

400

How does Shakespeare use Banquo to flatter the Kin James' legacy (Stuart monarchy)?

Banquo is presented as noble and morally upright; James I claimed descent from Banquo, reinforcing Stuart legitimacy.

400

How does “Will all great Neptune’s ocean wash this blood clean from my hand?” amplify guilt?

Extra 100 for the method 

Hyperbolic and mythological imagery suggests his guilt is vast, permanent, and spiritually contaminating.

400

Is Macbeth more villain or tragic figure in Acts 1 and 2?

Arguably tragic: he recognises the horror of his actions and suffers immediate psychological torment — yet villainous in consciously choosing regicide.

500

To what extent is Macbeth's decision to murder Duncan in Act 1 driven by internal ambition rather than external influence?

Primarily internal ambition (vaulting ambition) though catalyzed through the witches and Lady Macbeth's manipulation. The decision ultimately rests with Macbeth, acknowledging he has 'no spur' only ambition.

500

How does Shakespeare present Duncan’s murder as both a political crime and a cosmic disruption?

Through unnatural events (darkness during the day, horses eating each other, storms), suggesting the Great Chain of Being has been violated; regicide disrupts both state and nature.

500

How does Macbeth reflect Jacobean anxieties about disorder and threats to the state?

By showing how ambition, equivocation, and regicide destabilise political and natural order, reflecting fears of rebellion, Catholic plots, and divine punishment.

500

What is significant about Macbeth’s inability to say “Amen”?

It symbolises spiritual alienation and fear of damnation — he feels cut off from divine grace immediately after regicide.

500

How do the witches use equivocation (vagueness) to explore fate versus free will?

They speak in ambiguous language that tempts interpretation, leaving Macbeth to act on possibilities rather than certainties.

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