Today’s Totally Random
Lines
Hail!
Second Witch
Macbeth Act I, Scene iii, Line 107
Hail to you all. That’s our line of the day and our word of the day. Hail! It doesn’t get much shorter than that.
I really enjoy finding little gems all the time in Will's works even though I know that his works have been pored over and examined ad infinitum, so that I'm certainly never the first to discover these gems. This morning I noticed that the witches start this play, and they end their brief opening with
Fair is foul and foul is fair:
Hover through the fog and filthy air.
And then here in scene three Macbeth shows up for
the first time in the play, and his first line is
So foul and fair a day I have not seen.
Obviously Will is keying in on foul and fair. I wonder
how many more times it shows up in the play. I’m going to check the end.
Well, there’s Siward referring to his son who died
in battle
Had I as many sons as I have hairs,
I would not wish them to a fairer death.
So he’s got fair and death in the same sentence. Yes, that’s a continuation of the same thought, right to the end. Let’s take it as a way of knowing that a (the?) main theme of this work is the juxtaposition of foul and fair.
And
we’ll leave it at that.
2 comments:
Muscle pain is foul, but coffee is always fair.
Good answer!
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