First, in Act I, the key phrase, "Fair is foul, and foul is fair" (I, i, 10), was expressed as an example of the constant theme. That main phrase foreshadowed how appearances could deceive because, in essence, it stated that good was bad and bad was good. At first, the audience was shown that Macbeth was a gentle nobleman who would despise the thought of killing. However, Lady Macbeth, his wife, was greedy from the start of the play and continued to persuade her husband into killing the king, Duncan. The phrase foreshadowed the change in characters as well, because Macbeth was the "fair" individual, as his wife would start as the "foul" one. Further on, Banquo asked Macbeth, "Good sir, why do you start, and seem to fear / Things that do sound so fair?" (I, iii, 51-52) after he was told news by witches that he would be king. He was asking why he was frightened by good news; meanwhile, the audience knew that the witches were pernicious souls. In that passage, the appearance or sound of the news was good, but the truth was not fully told and therefore was misleading. Next, Lady Macbeth tells her husband, "Only look up clear / To alter favor ever is to fear" (I, v, 70). She told Macbeth to look composed and that he should not have an altered or worried face because such behavior
First, in Act I, the key phrase, "Fair is foul, and foul is fair" (I, i, 10), was expressed as an example of the constant theme. That main phrase foreshadowed how appearances could deceive because, in essence, it stated that good was bad and bad was good. At first, the audience was shown that Macbeth was a gentle nobleman who would despise the thought of killing. However, Lady Macbeth, his wife, was greedy from the start of the play and continued to persuade her husband into killing the king, Duncan. The phrase foreshadowed the change in characters as well, because Macbeth was the "fair" individual, as his wife would start as the "foul" one. Further on, Banquo asked Macbeth, "Good sir, why do you start, and seem to fear / Things that do sound so fair?" (I, iii, 51-52) after he was told news by witches that he would be king. He was asking why he was frightened by good news; meanwhile, the audience knew that the witches were pernicious souls. In that passage, the appearance or sound of the news was good, but the truth was not fully told and therefore was misleading. Next, Lady Macbeth tells her husband, "Only look up clear / To alter favor ever is to fear" (I, v, 70). She told Macbeth to look composed and that he should not have an altered or worried face because such behavior