Theme | Quote | % Correct |
---|---|---|
The Nature of Appearance and Reality (Act 2, Scene 2) | "A little water clears us of this deed" | 0%
|
The Nature of Appearance and Reality | Appearances are often deceptive and the reality behind them are unpleasant. | 0%
|
Destiny, Coercion and Free Will (Act 3, Scene 4) | "Are you a man?" | 0%
|
Corrupting Nature of Ambition (Act 1, Scene 5) | "Art not without ambition, but without the illness should attend it" | 0%
|
Masculinity, Violence and Fear | A society that values men on their bravery and ability to commit violence, will engender a violent society | 0%
|
Masculinity, Violence and Fear (Act 3, Scene 4) | "Blood will have blood" | 0%
|
The Nature of Appearances and Reality (Act 1, Scene 1) | "Fair is foul, and foul is fair" | 0%
|
Corrupting Nature of Ambition (Act 3, Scene 4) | "I am in blood, stepping in so far that should I wade no more, returning were as tedious as go o'er" | 0%
|
The Nature of Appearances and Reality (Act 3, Scene 1) | "I wish your horses swift and sure of foot" AND "To be thus is nothing, but to be safely thus" | 0%
|
Destiny, Coercion and Free Will (Act 1, Scene 3) | "Lesser than Macbeth, and greater" | 0%
|
The Nature of Appearances and Reality (Act 1, Scene 6) | "Look like th'innocent flower, but be the serpent under't" | 0%
|
Corrupting Nature of Ambition (Act 1, Scene 4) | "Stars, hide your fires, let light not see my black and deep desires" | 0%
|
Corrupting Nature of Ambition | The ambition an individual may possess is not an issue, but rather the way the individual fulfills it. | 0%
|
Destiny, Coercion and Free Will | Those who understand the fears and desires of an individual possess the ability to manipulate them. | 0%
|
Corrupting Nature of Ambition (Act 3, Scene 1) | "To be thus is nothing, but to be safely thus" | 0%
|
Masculinity, Violence and Fear (Act 1, Scene 5) | "Unsex me here" | 0%
|
Destiny, Coercion and Free Will (Act 1, Scene 7) | "We fail? But screw to the sticking place and we'll not fail" | 0%
|
Destiny, Coercion and Free Will (Act 3, Scene 2) (Act 5, Scene 1) | "What's done is done" AND "What's done cannot be undone" | 0%
|
Masculinity, Violence and Fear (Act 1, Scene 7) | "When you durst do it, then you were a man" | 0%
|
Masculinity, Violence and Fear (Act 3, Scene 4) | "Why so, being gone, I am a man again" | 0%
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