Monday, April 23, 2012

Double, Double, Toil and Trouble

The three witch sisters are by far by favorite characters in the entire play. I love the mysticism surrounding them. The way they talk about meeting “In thunder, lightening, or in rain” shows their indifference to the elements and the natural ways of the world. Right from the start, they appear to have more power than nature does itself. When one of them says, “Fair is foul, and foul is fair,” there’s almost a Taoist tone of voice that is unphased by whether things are going well or poorly. In the end, it’s all the same to them.

Shakespeare succeeds in making the witches appear absolutely vile in manner and personality. In Act 1 Scene 3, the witches meet once again and ask about one another’s day. One has been killing swine, another has full control of the winds and the fate of the husband whose wife was rude to her. Their power is in threes, “Thrice to thine and thrice to mine/ And thrice again, to make up nine./ Peace! The charm’s wound up.” They rely on the power of three times three times three in order to fulfill their charms. Three is a very magical number in most of Shakespearean plays. When the witches come together, they are most powerful.


When Macbeth arrives onto the witch’s territory, he says, “So foul and fair a day I have not seen,” a reflection of what the witches had said earlier about how fair is foul and foul is fair. Their powers extend to affect other’s reality. Banquo describes them as being not of this earth, of seeming barely alive and not feminine in the least due to their unlady-like beards.


They all greet Macbeth in ways that predict what will become of him in the future. They don’t even give him the choice as to whether or not he wants to know his future. They just say it simply because they have fun messing with people’s minds. They speak in riddles when they say of Banquo that he will be lesser than Macbeth and greater, and not as happy as Macbeth, but happier. They are very fun characters and they at times control other’s lives without actually using their mystical powers but rather by playing with the minds of others.

2 comments:

Cyrus Mulready said...

I really like your final point here about the Witches having a kind of rhetorical power over Macbeth. Their spells are not so much black magic as tricks of language. As we explored in our first class on the play, this language is markedly different from the speech of Macbeth and Duncan (at least at first). I think it's marvelous that Shakespeare gives us characters whose power is derived from their ability with words!

Linda Wessberg said...

I really enjoy this commentary on Macbeth. I think the witch sisters are definitely characters that I would love to further explore in some way, simply because they have such control in the play despite not even really being involved in any or the primary issues at hand. I really liked your point about their power being in threes as well, and the reference to three being a magic number. I hadn't made that connection before but it's very intriguing.