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Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

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Page 1: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Shakespeare’sMacbeth

& Early Modern English

Sara RiceEN 307

March 16, 2007

Page 2: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

You Don’t Know Billy » William Shakespeare is lauded

as perhaps the most prolific and influential writer in the history of the English language. Why? He was one of the first people to initiate the tradition of dramatic literature in English.

Prose was just starting to be used in plays as Shakespeare was born.

He invented and brought thousands of new words into Modern English, including “bedroom” and “lackluster.”

» William Shakespeare is lauded as perhaps the most prolific and influential writer in the history of the English language. Why? He was one of the first people to initiate the tradition of dramatic literature in English.

Prose was just starting to be used in plays as Shakespeare was born.

He invented and brought thousands of new words into Modern English, including “bedroom” and “lackluster.”

Page 3: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

The King’s Men» In 1603, King James VI comes to power and takes Shakespeare’s acting company, the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, as his own The King’s Men.

» In general, Elizabethan stage actors had about two weeks to rehearse and then put on each new play. The strain on the actors’ memory was enormous-- the use of iambic pentameter and blank verse were extremely helpful to memorization because they are sound patterns that are very close to natural human speech. A line of iambic pentameter is basically the length of one human breath.

» In 1603, King James VI comes to power and takes Shakespeare’s acting company, the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, as his own The King’s Men.

» In general, Elizabethan stage actors had about two weeks to rehearse and then put on each new play. The strain on the actors’ memory was enormous-- the use of iambic pentameter and blank verse were extremely helpful to memorization because they are sound patterns that are very close to natural human speech. A line of iambic pentameter is basically the length of one human breath.

Page 4: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Macbeth: The Historical Context

» Macbeth is supposed to have been written in 1606, three years after The King’s Men gained King James’s patronage.

» It is the play which best represents the relationship between Shakespeare and the King.

» King James claimed to be a descendant of the real Macbeth, with only eight kings in between them.

» James was also famous for his obsessions with the Divine Right Theory and with witchcraft, two big themes that Shakespeare incorporates into the play.

» Macbeth is supposed to have been written in 1606, three years after The King’s Men gained King James’s patronage.

» It is the play which best represents the relationship between Shakespeare and the King.

» King James claimed to be a descendant of the real Macbeth, with only eight kings in between them.

» James was also famous for his obsessions with the Divine Right Theory and with witchcraft, two big themes that Shakespeare incorporates into the play.

King James VI

Page 5: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Historical Context,Continued…

» Shakespeare took the basic story of Duncan and Macbeth from Hollinshed’s Chronicles, which dates the reign of these two Scottish monarchs between 1034 - 1057.

» Because he had to please his patron, Shakespeare made the character of Macbeth much more villainous than he probably was. (Shakespeare used the same flattery to please his Tudor patrons in Richard III)

» Shakespeare took the basic story of Duncan and Macbeth from Hollinshed’s Chronicles, which dates the reign of these two Scottish monarchs between 1034 - 1057.

» Because he had to please his patron, Shakespeare made the character of Macbeth much more villainous than he probably was. (Shakespeare used the same flattery to please his Tudor patrons in Richard III)

Page 6: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

To frame the passage, here’s what you need to

know:» Macbeth and his wife, set

on their path of murderous ambition by prophesies from a trio of meddling witches, have killed Scotland’s king and several others who were above Macbeth in line for the throne.

» By this time, in the fifth act, the Lords and Macbeth have gone to war over the kingdom and all of Macbeth’s deeds are catching up to him.

» Macbeth and his wife, set on their path of murderous ambition by prophesies from a trio of meddling witches, have killed Scotland’s king and several others who were above Macbeth in line for the throne.

» By this time, in the fifth act, the Lords and Macbeth have gone to war over the kingdom and all of Macbeth’s deeds are catching up to him.

Page 7: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Act Five, Scene 5Lines 9-28

Macbeth.I haue almost forgot the taste of Feares:The time ha’s beene, my sences would haue cool’dTo heare a Night-shrieke, and my Fell of haireWould at a dismall Treatise rowze, and stirreAs life were in’t. I haue supt full with horrors,Direness familiar to my slaughterous thoughtsCannot once start me. Wherefore was that cry?

Seyton. The Queene (my Lord) is dead.

Macbeth.I haue almost forgot the taste of Feares:The time ha’s beene, my sences would haue cool’dTo heare a Night-shrieke, and my Fell of haireWould at a dismall Treatise rowze, and stirreAs life were in’t. I haue supt full with horrors,Direness familiar to my slaughterous thoughtsCannot once start me. Wherefore was that cry?

Seyton. The Queene (my Lord) is dead.

Page 8: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Act Five, Scene FiveLines 9-28: Continued…Macbeth.She should haue dy’de heereafter;There would haue beene a time for such a word:To morrow, and to morrow, and to morrow,Creepes in this petty pace from day to day,To the last Syllable of Recorded time:And all our yesterdayes, haue lighted FoolesThe way to dusty death. Out, out, breefe Candle,Life’s but a walking Shadow, a poore Player,That struts and frets his houre vpon the Stage,And then is heard no more. It is a TaleTold by an Ideot, full of sound and furySignifying nothing.

Macbeth.She should haue dy’de heereafter;There would haue beene a time for such a word:To morrow, and to morrow, and to morrow,Creepes in this petty pace from day to day,To the last Syllable of Recorded time:And all our yesterdayes, haue lighted FoolesThe way to dusty death. Out, out, breefe Candle,Life’s but a walking Shadow, a poore Player,That struts and frets his houre vpon the Stage,And then is heard no more. It is a TaleTold by an Ideot, full of sound and furySignifying nothing.

Page 9: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Vocabulary

» Wherefore: archaic way to say “why” (Remember, Juliet doesn’t ask where Romeo is, she asks him why he has to be a Montague)

» Sences (senses): had several, interchangeable meanings. Here, it is likely that Macbeth means his sanity, his right mind.

» Dismall (dismal): had a different meaning in Shakespeare’s day-- it could mean calamitous, which is likely in this context.

» Wherefore: archaic way to say “why” (Remember, Juliet doesn’t ask where Romeo is, she asks him why he has to be a Montague)

» Sences (senses): had several, interchangeable meanings. Here, it is likely that Macbeth means his sanity, his right mind.

» Dismall (dismal): had a different meaning in Shakespeare’s day-- it could mean calamitous, which is likely in this context.

Page 10: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Style and Grammar» First half: soliloquy to the audience and to himself Soliloquies were common in Elizabethan theatre

General conventions of the soliloquy: the speaker has to be honest in soliloquy-- they are performed in order to bring the character and the audience closer together

» This monologue of Macbeth’s is written in blank verse, with hints of iambic patterning.

» Punctuation: Shakespeare was notoriously cavalier and sparse with his punctuation. Modern editors usually make changes to clean it all up.

» First half: soliloquy to the audience and to himself Soliloquies were common in Elizabethan theatre

General conventions of the soliloquy: the speaker has to be honest in soliloquy-- they are performed in order to bring the character and the audience closer together

» This monologue of Macbeth’s is written in blank verse, with hints of iambic patterning.

» Punctuation: Shakespeare was notoriously cavalier and sparse with his punctuation. Modern editors usually make changes to clean it all up.

Page 11: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Grammar, Continued…

» The first word of every line is capitalized, even though many are in the middle of sentences -> poetic convention.

» In addition, many of the passage’s important words (from all parts of speech) are capitalized.

» The first word of every line is capitalized, even though many are in the middle of sentences -> poetic convention.

» In addition, many of the passage’s important words (from all parts of speech) are capitalized.

Page 12: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Spelling

» “Haue” and “vpon”-- in Early Modern English, the [u] and [v] were interchangeable.

» Some consonants were still doubled

- “stirre” for stir» Generally, a more phonetic spelling than even our Modern Standard English.

» “Haue” and “vpon”-- in Early Modern English, the [u] and [v] were interchangeable.

» Some consonants were still doubled

- “stirre” for stir» Generally, a more phonetic spelling than even our Modern Standard English.

Page 13: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Pronunciations

• “and” was allowed to drop its last letter in speech: “an’”

• “with” was pronounced with an unvoiced “th”

• “and” was allowed to drop its last letter in speech: “an’”

• “with” was pronounced with an unvoiced “th”

Page 14: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

For the Groundlings…

- It was built to hold 2,000 people but often housed an audience as big as 3,000 people

- The stage was only five feet from the closest groundlings, but the actors had to compete with weather and crowd noise, so their speech had to be loud and clear.

- It was built to hold 2,000 people but often housed an audience as big as 3,000 people

- The stage was only five feet from the closest groundlings, but the actors had to compete with weather and crowd noise, so their speech had to be loud and clear.

The Globe was a twenty-sided,

Open-air

amphitheatre

Page 15: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Macbeth’s Legacy» There are two very famous lines taken from

Macbeth One is the Wyrd Sisters’ “Double, double toil and trouble: Fire, burn; and cauldron, bubble.” (Act IV, Scene I)

The other is from this passage. If the last lines sound familiar, they should; William Faulkner took Shakespeare’s “Sound and fury” comment and named his famous novel after it (1929’s The Sound And The Fury)

» There are two very famous lines taken from Macbeth One is the Wyrd Sisters’ “Double, double toil and trouble: Fire, burn; and cauldron, bubble.” (Act IV, Scene I)

The other is from this passage. If the last lines sound familiar, they should; William Faulkner took Shakespeare’s “Sound and fury” comment and named his famous novel after it (1929’s The Sound And The Fury)

Page 16: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

THE

END

Page 17: Shakespeare’s Macbeth & Early Modern English Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007 Sara Rice EN 307 March 16, 2007

Sources Consulted

» The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Edited by Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor

» The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, HarperCollins Edition

» Early Modern English by Charles Barber. London: Andre Deutsch Limited, 1976.

» Oxford English Dictionary (Online)

» The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, Edited by Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor

» The Complete Works of William Shakespeare, HarperCollins Edition

» Early Modern English by Charles Barber. London: Andre Deutsch Limited, 1976.

» Oxford English Dictionary (Online)