![]() Lady Macbeth Seizing the Daggers From Tate Collections |
scene i
Banquo and his son Fleance walk in the torch-lit hall of Macbeth's castle. Macbeth
enters, and Banquo is surprised to see him still up. Banquo says that the king
is asleep and mentions that he had a dream about the "three weird sisters."
When Banquo suggests that the witches have revealed "some truth" to
Macbeth, Macbeth claims that he has not thought of them at all since their encounter
in the woods (II.i.19¡V20). He and Banquo agree to discuss the witches' prophecies
at a later time.Banquo and Fleance leave, and suddenly Macbeth has a vision
of a dagger floating in the air before him, its handle pointing toward his hand
and its tip aiming him toward Duncan. Macbeth tries to grasp the weapon and
fails. He wonders whether what he sees is real or a "dagger of the mind,
a false creation / Proceeding from the heat-oppressed brain" (II.i.38¡V39).
With horror, Macbeth stiffens and resolves to do his bloody work. A bell tolls¡XLady
Macbeth's signal that the chamberlains are asleep¡Xand Macbeth strides toward
Duncan's chamber.
scene ii
As Macbeth leaves the hall, Lady Macbeth enters, remarking on her boldness.
She imagines that Macbeth is killing the king as she speaks. Hearing Macbeth
cry out, she worries that the chamberlains have awakened. She says that she
cannot understand how Macbeth could fail¡Xshe had prepared the daggers for the
chamberlains herself. She asserts that she would have killed the king herself
then. Macbeth emerges, his hands covered in blood, and says that the deed is
done. Badly shaken, he remarks that he heard the chamberlains awake and say
their prayers before going back to sleep. When they said "amen," he
tried to say it with them but found that the word stuck in his throat. He adds
that as he killed the king, he thought he heard a voice cry out: "Sleep
no more, / Macbeth does murder sleep" (II.ii.33¡V34).
Lady Macbeth at first tries to steady her husband, but she becomes angry when
she notices that he has forgotten to leave the daggers with the sleeping chamberlains
so as to frame them for Duncan's murder. He refuses to go back into the room,
so she takes the daggers into the room herself, saying that she would be ashamed
to be as cowardly as Macbeth. As she leaves, Macbeth hears a mysterious knocking.
The portentous sound frightens him, and he asks desperately, "Will all
great Neptune's ocean wash this blood / Clean from my hand?" (II.ii.58¡V59).
As Lady Macbeth reenters the hall, the knocking comes again, and then a third
time. She leads her husband back to the bedchamber, where he can wash off the
blood. "A little water clears us of this deed," she tells him. "How
easy it is then!" (II.ii.65¡V66).
scene iii
A porter stumbles through the hallway to answer the knocking, grumbling comically
about the noise and mocking whoever is on the other side of the door. He compares
himself to a porter at the gates of hell and asks, "Who's there, i' th'
name of Beelzebub?" (II.iii.3). Macduff and Lennox enter, and Macduff complains
about the porter's slow response to his knock. The porter says that he was up
late carousing and rambles on humorously about the effects of alcohol, which
he says provokes red noses, sleepiness, and urination. He adds that drink also
"provokes and unprovokes" lechery¡Xit inclines one to be lustful but
takes away the ability to have sex (II.iii.27). Macbeth enters, and Macduff
asks him if the king is awake, saying that Duncan asked to see him early that
morning. In short, clipped sentences, Macbeth says that Duncan is still asleep.
He offers to take Macduff to the king. As Macduff enters the king's chamber,
Lennox describes the storms that raged the previous night, asserting that he
cannot remember anything like it in all his years. With a cry of "O horror,
horror, horror!" Macduff comes running from the room, shouting that the
king has been murdered (II.iii.59). Macbeth and Lennox rush in to look, while
Lady Macbeth appears and expresses her horror that such a deed could be done
under her roof. General chaos ensues as the other nobles and their servants
come streaming in. As Macbeth and Lennox emerge from the bedroom, Malcolm and
Donalbain arrive on the scene. They are told that their father has been killed,
most likely by his chamberlains, who were found with bloody daggers. Macbeth
declares that in his rage he has killed the chamberlains.Macduff seems suspicious
of these new deaths, which Macbeth explains by saying that his fury at Duncan's
death was so powerful that he could not restrain himself. Lady Macbeth suddenly
faints, and both Macduff and Banquo call for someone to attend to her. Malcolm
and Donalbain whisper to each other that they are not safe, since whoever killed
their father will probably try to kill them next. Lady Macbeth is taken away,
while Banquo and Macbeth rally the lords to meet and discuss the murder. Duncan's
sons resolve to flee the court. Malcolm declares that he will go south to England,
and Donalbain will hasten to Ireland.
scene iv
Ross, a thane, walks outside the castle with an old man. They discuss the strange
and ominous happenings of the past few days: it is daytime, but dark outside;
last Tuesday, an owl killed a falcon; and Duncan's beautiful, well-trained horses
behaved wildly and ate one another. Macduff emerges from the castle and tells
Ross that Macbeth has been made king by the other lords, and that he now rides
to Scone to be crowned. Macduff adds that the chamberlains seem the most likely
murderers, and that they may have been paid off by someone to kill Duncan. Suspicion
has now fallen on the two princes, Malcolm and Donalbain, because they have
fled the scene. Macduff returns to his home at Fife, and Ross departs for Scone
to see the new king's coronation.