The Witches & Prophecies
Macbeth's
choices
Lady Macduff's Scene
Symbols & Imagery
Themes & Big Ideas
100

Who does Macbeth visit at the start of Act 4?

The Witches

100

What does Macbeth decide to do to Macduff's family?

Kill them

100

Who is speaking with Lady Macduff in Act 4, Scene 2?

Her son

100

What do the witches' cauldron and ingredients symbolise?

Evil and chaos

100
What theme is shown when Macbeth trusts the witches too much?

The danger of ambition or temptation

200

What does the first apparition warn Macbeth to "beware" of?

Macduff

200

Why does Macbeth want to kill Macduff's family?

Out of fear and anger, he wants to destroy any threat

200

What does Lady Macduff think about her husband fleeing to England?

She feels he has abandoned his family

200

What famous line is said by the witches as they make their potion?

"Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn and cauldron bubble."

200

What theme is shown through Macduff's reaction to his family's murder?

Justice and revenge

300

What does the second apparition say about "none of woman born"?

No one born of a woman can harm Macbeth

300

What line shows Macbeth's impulsive nature here?

"The very firstlings of my heart shall be the firstlings of my hand."

300

How does Lady Macduff describe Macduff's flight?

"His flight was madness."

300

What image do the apparitions create around fate?

The show visions that twist the truth, symbolising false security

300

How does Act 4 explore fate vs. free will?

Macbeth chooses to act on prophecies rather than wait for fate

400

What does the third apparition say about when Macbeth will be defeated?

He will not be defeated until Birnam Wood moves to Dunsinane Hill

400

How has Macbeth changed since the start of the play?

He acts without thinking, has lost all morality

400

What happens to Lady Macduff and her son?

They are murdered on Macbeth's orders

400

How does the image of "Birnam Wood" symbolise fate catching up?

Nature itself turns against Macbeth. Fate is unavoidable

400

What abstract idea does the line "something wicked this way comes" suggest?

Macbeth has become truly evil, he is now the "wicked" one

500

What do these prophecies make Macbeth feel: confident or cautious? Why?

Confident, he feels invincible because the prophecies sound impossible

500

What abstract idea is shown through Macbeth's violence here?

The corrupting power of ambition/moral decay

500

What theme does this scene highlight about Macbeth's rule?

Tyranny and the loss of innocence

500

What abstract idea does the cauldron scene represent?

The blurring of reality and illusion. Deception and destiny

500

How does Act 4 prepare us for Macbeth's downfall?

It shows how his overconfidence and cruelty will lead to his destruction