![]() No such ambiguity occurs in the response of the Witches to Macbeth: He is Thane of Glamis, he is Thane of Cawdor, and he shall be King. ![]() ![]() Later in the scene, Macbeth remarks that the Witches "seem'd corporal " and yet they vanish like bubbles "into the air." Macbeth's first words ("So foul and fair a day I have not seen") ironically recall the Witches' "foul is fair" in Scene 1, but Banquo is the first to spot the weird sisters, remarking on the Witches' ambiguous and confused appearance: They "look not like the inhabitants of the earth, / And yet are on it" they seem to understand him, and yet he cannot be sure they "should be women," and yet they are bearded. Famously, Macbeth later believes that, in murdering Duncan, he "has murder'd sleep," and both he and Lady Macbeth are denied "Sleep that knits up the ravelled sleeve of care." Finally, the metaphor of a storm at sea is traditionally used to refer to confusion and the unpredictability of events. The sailor is the captain of a ship, in the same way that Macbeth is to become "captain" of his land like the sailor, Macbeth will be blown by the tempests of ill Fortune. The opening of Scene 3 does more than to simply recall us to the world of the supernatural of Act I, Scene 1: The Witches' curse of the sailor foreshadows what Fate has in store for Macbeth. The Witches' first prophecy has come true. Ross and Angus arrive on the scene to confirm what we already know, that Macbeth is to be invested with the thaneship of Cawdor. Immediately, the Witches vanish into thin air, leaving the two captains in amazement. Macbeth shall be named as Thane of Cawdor and then king Banquo, although he shall not himself rule in Scotland, will be father to future generations of kings. The sisters make three prophecies, the first two regarding Macbeth and the last regarding Banquo. Having demonstrated their power by casting a terrible curse upon a sailor whose wife offended one of them, they encounter Macbeth and Banquo as the two soldiers ride from the battlefield. With a clap of thunder, the Witches reappear.
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