Form, Structure and Language
Form, Structure and Language
The form of a text is the type of text you are reading or watching. The
form of Macbeth is a dramatic play. More specifically, it is a tragedy.
The simplest definition of a tragedy would be "a play with an
unhappy ending". While this is true, it is probably just a bit too
simple.
Tragic plays can be traced back all the way to the beginnings of
drama in Ancient Greece. In Poetics, one of the first books of literary
criticism, Aristotle set out the key features of tragedy. He stated that
tragic plays would involve a protagonist (the leading central figure)
who is usually of royal or noble birth. In the course of the play, the
protagonist reveals a fatal flaw (a character defect) which causes him
or her to go from success and happiness to failure, misery and, often,
death at the hands of an antagonist (his opposite). Tragedy set out to
stir up feelings of fear and pity in the audience – this is known as
catharsis.
The events of this play are organised into five acts, each containing a
number of scenes. However, it is important to note that Shakespeare
himself almost certainly did not organise the play in this way and that
this structure would have been added later during the editing process
when the plays were turned into published text after being performed
that way.
The idea of the five-act structure is a useful one, though, as it follows
the model designed by Gustav Freytag, a German author from the
19th-century. Having carefully studied classical drama, he suggested
there were five stages in a tragic dramatic structure.
eg
x/x/x/x/x/
Try saying this aloud while tapping out the rhythm of the five beats to
see how it works. The ends of lines are not generally rhymed which
helps to maintain the flow of the speech and carry through the
meaning of what the character is saying.
eg
x/x/
LADY MACBETH: Did not you speak?
MACBETH: When?
x/x/
As I descended?
To separate the Witches from other characters, they often speak with a
different rhythmic pattern which only has four beats with (this time) a
stressed (/) syllable followed by an unstressed (x) syllable:
eg
/x/x/x/
Again, try saying this aloud while tapping out the rhythm of the four
beats to see how it works. Generally this structure tends to speed up
the rhythm in which the words are spoken and gives the whole thing a
more "sing-song" quality – this is, of course, very appropriate for the
Witches' chanting.
Prose
eg
Here’s the smell of the blood still; all the perfumes of Arabia will not
sweeten this little hand. O, O, O.
William Shakespeare
1. Key words
There are a number of key words in Macbeth which are used over and
over again. This repetition reinforces their importance in the mind of
the audience or reader and adds strongly to the overall atmosphere of
the play. Three of the most important key words in the play
are blood, night and time.
Blood
The table shows some examples of the use of the key word blood:
Macbeth sees a
'And on thy blade and vision of a blood-
Act 2
dudgeon gouts stained dagger
Scene 1
of blood' before he murders
Duncan.
feelings.
Macbeth recalls an
old saying that
blood shed through
violence seeks
'It will have blood they
more blood in Act 3
say: blood will
revenge, creating a Scene 4
have blood.'
cycle of bloodshed;
he feels trapped in
the inevitability of
this violence.
violence already
that it's impossible
tedious as go o'er' to undo them and
he may as well
keep killing.
'Cool it with a
The Witches use
baboon's blood, / Then Act 4
blood as part of
the charm is firm and Scene 1
one of their spells.
good.'
Lady Macbeth
sleepwalks and
'Here's the smell of Act 5
imagines she has
the blood still' Scene 1
blood on her
hands.
Night
The table shows some examples of the use of the key word night:
How? Who? Where?
Time
The table shows some examples of the use of the key word time:
'The worm that's fled / Macbeth has just been told Act 3 Scene 4
Hath nature that that Banquo has been
in time will venom murdered but that his son,
breed, / No teeth for Fleance, has escaped.
th'present.' Macbeth realises that in the
future Fleance will come to
be as big a threat as his dead
How? Who? Where?
father.
Imagery
Imagery is the general term covering the use of literary devices which
encourage us to form a mental picture in our mind about the way
something or someone looks, sounds, behaves, etc. The language used
often relates to one or more of our five senses.
The three most common literary devices which come under this
heading are simile, metaphor and personification.
birds
wild animals
Birds
The table shows some examples of the many references to birds in the
play:
Shakespeare would have known that his audience would make the
necessary connections between the birds he mentions and the actions
and thoughts of his characters. They are used to highlight things that
have happened, that are happening or that will happen and
therefore create both expectation and tension.
Wild animals
Nature has often been described as 'red in tooth and claw' and it is this
idea that Shakespeare uses in his references to wild animals. They are
savage and untameable and share certain characteristics with
people in the play. The table shows some examples of the many
references to wild animals in the play:
In addition to the above, the famous scene (Act 4 Scene 1) where the
Witches create their magic potion features virtually a whole zoo of
animals. The following are listed: cat, hedge-pig (hedgehog), toad,
snake, newt, frog, bat, dog, adder, blind worm, lizard, howlet (young
owl), dragon, wolf, shark, goat, baboon and sow. All of these had
associations with evil and/or witchcraft.
Glossary
1. blank verse
Lines in a poem that don't rhyme, usually in iambic
pentameter - five two-syllable feet per line.
2. chronological
The logical order of events in time, from beginning to middle
to end.
3. fatal flaw
In tragedy this refers to a defect in someone's character that
leads them to a bad end.
4. iambic pentameter
Line of verse written in five pairs of syllables each made up
by an unstressed syllable followed by a stressed syllable.
5. imagery
The use of language to create images and pictures in the
reader's mind.
6. literary device
Any method an author uses to add meaning or interest to a
text, such as metaphors, similes or alliteration.
7. metaphor
A comparison made without using 'like' or 'as', eg 'sea of
troubles' and 'drowning in debt'.
8. personification
A type of imagery in which non-human objects, animals or
ideas are given human characteristics.
9. prose
Unrhymed - like everyday talk.
10.simile
A comparison using 'like' or 'as' to create a vivid image, eg
as big as a whale; float like a butterfly, sting like a bee.
11.syllable
Each individual part of a word which is pronounced when
the word is said aloud.