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Review: Sir Gawain • (c.1375-1400) • “The Pearl Poet” • Heroic age v. leisure class • Romantic, chivalric, hero—”fighting for an idea” • Time—cyclic, degenerative, regenerative (fate goes ever as fate must?) • Pentangle, five: sense, fingers, wounds of Christ, joys of Mary • Gawain’s virtues: beneficence, brotherly love, pure mind, manners, compassion • Hospitality: sacred guest-host relationship • Gawain’s response to beautiful • • • • • v. “toothsome” women Reputation? “Instruct me a little, do, / While my husband is not nearby” Adam & Eve, David & Bathsheba, Solomon & his idolatrous wives, Samson & Delila But as a sign of excess it shall seem oftentimes When I ride in renown, and remember with shame The faults and the frailty of the flesh perverse. (2433-2435) • Morgan le Faye & Merlin: the supernatural • The green belt as symbol…of what? • The number three and Christian symbolism MACBETH Théodore Chassériau (1819– 1856), The Ghost of Banquo 1855 History and Sources • Shakespeare’s interpretation of Holinshed’s Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland. • King Duncan is weak and youthful, but Shakespeare makes him more respected to dramatize his consequent murder. • Lady Macbeth is hardly mentioned. • The historical Macbeth reigned for 17 years. The Witches & Superstition • King James produced the book, Daemonologie (1597), which provided ways to recognize witches as well as to defeat their spells. • He was particularly concerned with the threat of witchcraft after several women were tried in connection with their self acclaimed attempt to sink his ship during his wedding journey. These women claimed to have sailed "in a sieve" which Shakespeare uses in Act I, scene 3. (All three of the women concerned were burned-as were between 4,500 and 8,000 other supposed witches during that century.) Macbeth: Theatrical Terminology • Tragedy • Tragic Flaw • Stage Direction • Soliloquy • Monologue • Asides • Blank Verse • Act, Scene Genre and the Theatre: Tragedy Reading Questions: finishing Macbeth 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. In Act 3, Scene 4—the famous banquet scene—which character(s) see Banquo’s ghost? Do audiences see him? Within the world of the play, how does this inform Macbeth’s madness? Why is Hecate angry in Act 3, Scene 5? What purpose do you think this character serves? List at least three ingredients the witches add to their cauldron. How are these ingredients “monstrous,” even problematically so? How does Macduff’s wife compare to Lady Macbeth is their respective characterizations? How does the scene with Macduff’s wife and child serve to characterize him? Early in the play, Lady Macbeth conjures spirits to come to her “Stop up th’access and passage to remorse…Come to [her] woman’s breasts / And take [her] milk for gall.” Do you feel the spirits grant her request? Why or why not? What is the Doctor’s diagnosis and cure for Lady Macbeth’s sickness? What is Macbeth’s response to this cure? What do you make of Macbeth’s response to his wife’s death (hint: it’s one of his most famous monologues)? What’s his state of mind at this time, and thereafter? What is Macbeth’s tragic flaw? Do you empathize with any characteristics of Macbeth or Lady Macbeth?