La famosa tragedia de William Shakespeare
Macbeth es una de las grandes tragedias de William Shakespeare . Hay asesinatos, batallas, portentos sobrenaturales y todos los demás elementos de un drama bien trabajado. Aquí hay algunas citas de Macbeth .
- "primera bruja: ¿cuándo nos volveremos a encontrar tres
en truenos, relámpagos o lluvia?
segunda bruja: cuando termine el alboroto,
cuando la batalla se pierda y gane ".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.1 - "justo es sucio y lo sucio es justo."
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.1 - "¿Qué hombre maldito es ese?"
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.2 - "el sueño ni la noche ni el día
dependerán de la tapa de su penthouse".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "¿disminuirá, pico y pino?"
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "Las hermanas extrañas, de la mano,
carteles del mar y la tierra,
por lo tanto, andan por ahí".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "¿Qué son estos
tan marchitos y tan salvajes en su atuendo,
que no se parecen a los habitantes de la tierra,
y aún están en eso ?"
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "si puedes mirar las semillas del tiempo
y decir qué grano crecerá y cuál no".
- William Shakespeare, Macbeth , 1.3 - "no está dentro de la perspectiva de la creencia".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "por ejemplo, ¿de dónde
debes esta extraña inteligencia? ¿O por qué
en este maldito brezal nos detienes
con un saludo tan profético?"
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3
- "¿O hemos comido en la raíz loca
que toma la razón prisionero?"
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "¡qué! ¿Puede el diablo hablar verdad?"
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1. 3 - se dicen dos verdades,
como felices prólogos del creciente acto
del tema imperial. "
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "Los temores actuales
son menos que horribles imaginaciones".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "nada es
sino lo que no es".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "Si el azar me tiene rey, el azar puede coronarme".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "Pase lo que pase, el
tiempo y la hora pasan por el día más duro".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.3 - "Nada en su vida se
convirtió en él como dejarlo; murió
como uno que había sido estudiado en su muerte
para tirar lo más querido que debía,
como si fuera una bagatela descuidada".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.4 - "No hay arte
para encontrar la construcción de la mente en la cara".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.4 - "se debe más de lo que todos pueden pagar".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.4
- "Sin embargo, temo a tu naturaleza;
está demasiado llena de la leche de la bondad humana".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.5 - "lo que quisieras,
eso lo harías santamente; no jugarías a falso,
y ganarías erróneamente".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.5 - "¡Vengan, espíritus
que atienden los pensamientos mortales! Desátenme aquí,
y llénenme desde la coronilla hasta la punta de los pies llena
de crueldad absoluta; espesen mi sangre,
detengan el acceso y el paso al remordimiento, para
que no haya visitas complejas de la naturaleza
agite mi propósito caído ".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.5 - "ven a los senos de mi mujer
y toma mi leche por irritación, asesinando ministros".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.5 - "ven, noche espesa,
y palidece en el humo más sombrío del infierno,
que mi agudo cuchillo no vea la herida que hace,
ni que el cielo se asome a través de la manta de la oscuridad,
a gritar, 'espera, espera'"
- william shakespeare , macbeth , 1.5 - "Tu cara, mi thane, es como un libro donde los hombres
pueden leer cosas extrañas. Para engañar al tiempo,
parece el tiempo; dale la bienvenida a tus ojos,
tu mano, tu lengua: parece la flor inocente,
pero sé la serpiente bajo 't ".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.5
- "Este castillo tiene un asiento agradable; el aire se
recomienda ágil y dulcemente
a nuestros sentidos gentiles".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.6 - "El aliento del cielo
huele tristemente aquí: no hay saltos, frisos,
contrafuertes, ni coraje de ventaja, pero este pájaro
ha hecho su cama colgante y cuna procreadora:
donde he criado y obsesionado, he observado,
el aire es delicado".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.6 - "si se hizo cuando se hizo, entonces fue bien
, se hizo rápidamente: si el asesinato
pudo traspasar la consecuencia y atrapar
con su éxito creciente; eso, pero este golpe
podría ser el todo y el final" aquí,
pero aquí, en este banco y en un corto período de tiempo,
saltaríamos la vida por venir, pero en estos casos
todavía tenemos juicio aquí; que solo enseñamos
instrucciones sangrientas, que se enseñan, vuelven
a plagar al inventor: esto la justicia
imparcial recomienda los ingredientes de nuestro cáliz envenenado
a nuestros propios labios ".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.7 - "además, este duncan
ha llevado sus facultades tan mansas, ha sido
tan claro en su gran oficio, que sus virtudes
se declararán como ángeles, con lengua de trompeta, contra
la condenación profunda de su despegue;
y lástima, como un nuevo desnudo -bebé nacido, dando
zancadas a la explosión, o querubines del cielo, a caballo
sobre los mensajeros ciegos del aire,
soplarán la horrible acción en cada ojo,
que las lágrimas ahogarán el viento. No tengo espuela
para pinchar los lados de mi intención, pero solo la
ambición de salto, que se sobrepasa
y cae sobre el otro ".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.7
- "He comprado
opiniones de oro de todo tipo de personas".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.7 - "¿Estaba borracha la esperanza,
en la que te vestiste? ¿Ha dormido desde entonces,
y la despierta ahora, para verse tan verde y pálida
por lo que hizo tan libremente? Desde este momento
, considero tu amor".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.7 - "dejar que" no me atreva "esperar" lo haría ",
como el pobre gato," el adagio "
- william shakespeare , macbeth , 1.7 - "Me atrevo a hacer todo lo que pueda convertirse en un hombre;
quien se atreva a hacer más es ninguno".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.7 - " Le di una mamada y sé
cuán tierno es amar al bebé que me ordeña:
mientras me sonreía
, le
arranqué el pezón de las encías deshuesadas y me arranqué el cerebro, si lo hubiera hecho. tan jurado como lo
has hecho con esto ".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.7 - "atornille su coraje al lugar donde se pegan,
y no fallaremos".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.7 - "Trae solo hombres-niños;
porque tu temple inquebrantable no debe componer
nada más que hombres".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.7
Aquí hay más citas de Macbeth .
38. "la cara falsa debe ocultar lo que el corazón falso sabe".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 1.7
39. "hay cría en el cielo;
sus velas están apagadas".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 2.1
40. "¿Es esta una daga que veo delante de mí,
el mango hacia mi mano? Ven, déjame agarrarte.
No te tengo, y aún así te veo todavía.
¿No eres tú, una visión fatal, sensible
a los sentimientos? ¿vista? ¿O no eres más que
una daga de la mente, una creación falsa, que
procede del cerebro oprimido por el calor?
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 2.1
41. "ahora sobre la mitad del mundo la
naturaleza parece muerta".
- William Shakespeare , Macbeth , 2.1
42. "thou sure and firm-set earth,
hear not my steps, which way they walk, for fear
thy very stones prate of my whereabout." -
william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.1
43. "the bell invites me.
hear it not, duncan; for it is a knell
that summons thee to heaven or to hell."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.1
44. "that which hath made them drunk hath made me bold,
what hath quenched them hath given me fire."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
45. "it was the owl that shrieked, the fatal bellman,
which gives the stern'st good-night."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
47. "the attempt and not the deed
confounds us."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
48. "had he not resembled
my father as he slept i had done't."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
49. "wherefore could i not pronounce 'amen'?
i had most need of blessing, and 'amen'
stuck in my throat."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
50. "methought i heard a voice cry, 'sleep no more!
macbeth does murder sleep!' the innocent sleep,
sleep that knits up the ravelled sleave of care,
the death of each day's life, sore labor's bath,
balm of hurt minds, great nature's second course,
chief nourisher in life's feast."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
51. "glamis hath murdered sleep, and there cawdor
shall sleep no more, macbeth shall sleep no more!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
52. "i am afraid to think what i have done;
look on't again i dare not."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
53. "infirm of purpose!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
54. "'tis the eye of childhood
that fears a painted devil."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
55. "will all great neptune's ocean wash this blood
clean from my hand? no, this my hand will rather
the multitudinous seas incarnadine,
making the green one red."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
56. "a little water clears us of this deed."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.2
57. "here's a knocking, indeed! if a man were porter of hell-gate he should have old turning the key. knock, knock, knock! who's there, i' the name of beelzebub? here's a farmer that hanged himself on the expectation of plenty."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
58. "this place is too cold for hell. i'll devil-porter it no further: i had thought to have let in some of all professions, that go the primrose way to the everlasting bonfire."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
59. "porter: drink, sir, is a great provoker of three things. macduff: what three things does drink especially provoke?
porter: marry, sir, nose-painting, sleep, and urine. lechery, sir, it provokes, and unprovokes; it provokes the desire, but it takes away the performance."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
60. "the labor we delight in physics pain."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
61. "the night has been unruly: where we lay,
our chimneys were blown down; and, as they say,
lamentings heard i' the air; strange screams of death,
and prophesying with accents terrible
of dire combustion and confused events
new hatched to the woeful time. the obscure bird
clamored the livelong night: some say the earth
was feverous and did shake."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
62. "tongue nor heart
cannot conceive nor name thee!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
63. "confusion now hath made his masterpiece!
most sacrilegious murder hath broke ope
the lord's anointed temple, and stole thence
the life o' the building!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
64. "shake off this downy sleep, death's counterfeit,
and look on death itself! up, up, and see
the great doom's image!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
65. "had i but lived an hour before this chance,
i had lived a blessed time."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
66. "there's daggers in men's smiles."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.3
67. "a falcon, towering in her pride of place,
was by a mousing owl hawked at and killed."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.4
68. "thriftless ambition, that wilt ravin up
thine own life's means!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 2.4
69. "thou hast it now: king, cawdor, glamis, all,
as the weird women promised; and, i fear,
thou play'dst most foully for't.
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.1
70. "i must become a borrower of the night
for a dark hour or twain."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.1
71. "let every man be master of his time
till seven at night."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.1
72. "upon my head they placed a fruitless crown,
and put a barren sceptre in my gripe,
thence to be wrench'd with an unlineal hand,
no son of mine succeeding."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.1
73. "first murderer: we are men, my liege.
macbeth: ay, in the catalogue ye go for men,
as hounds and greyhounds, mongrels, spaniels, curs,
shoughs, water-rugs, and demi-wolves are clipt
all by the name of dogs."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.1
74. "leave no rubs nor botches in the work."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.1
75. "lady macbeth: things without all remedy
should be without regard; what's done is done.
macbeth: we have scotched the snake, not killed it;
she'll close and be herself, while our poor malice
remains in danger of her former tooth."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.2
76. "duncan is in his grave;
after life's fitful fever he sleeps well:
treason has done his worst; nor steel, nor poison,
malice domestic, foreign levy, nothing,
can touch him further."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.2
here are even more quotes from macbeth, by william shakespeare.
77. "ere the bat hath flown
his cloistered flight, ere, to black hecate's summons
the shard-borne beetle with his drowsy hums
hath rung night's yawning peal, there shall be done
a deed of dreadful note."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.2
78. "come, seeling night,
scarf up the tender eye of pitiful day,
and with thy bloody and invisible hand
cancel and tear to pieces that great bond
which keeps me pale! light thickens, and the crow
makes wing to the rooky wood;
good things of day begin to droop and drowse,
whiles night's black agents to their preys do rouse."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.2
79. "cancel and tear to pieces that great bond
which keeps me pale! light thickens, and the crow
makes wing to the rooky wood;
good things of day begin to droop and drowse,
whiles night's black agents to their preys do rouse."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.2
80. "things bad begun make strong themselves by ill.
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.2
81. "the west yet glimmers with some streaks of day:
now spurs the lated traveller apace
to gain the timely inn."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.3
82. "but now i am cabined, cribbed, confined, bound in
to saucy doubts and fears."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.4
83. "now, good digestion wait on appetite,
and health on both!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.4
84. "thou canst not say i did it; never shake
thy gory locks at me."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.4
85. "what man dare, i dare:
approach thou like the rugged russian bear,
the armed rhinoceros, or the hyrcan tiger,-
take any shape but that, and my firm nerves
shall never tremble."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.4
86. "hence, horrible shadow!
unreal mockery, hence!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.4
87. "stand not upon the order of your going,
but go at once."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.4
88. "blood will have blood."
william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.4
89. "i am in blood
stepped in so far that, should i wade no more,
returning were as tedious as go o'er."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.4
90. "you lack the season of all natures, sleep."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 3.4
91. "round about the cauldron go;
in the poisoned entrails throw.
toad, that under cold stone
days and nights hast thirty-one
sweltered venom sleeping got,
boil thou first i' the charmed pot.
double, double toil and trouble;
fire burn, and cauldron bubble."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1
92. "eye of newt and toe of frog,
wool of bat and tongue of dog.
adder's fork, and blind-worm's sting,
lizard's leg, and howlet's wing,
for a charm of powerful trouble,
like a hell-broth boil and bubble."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1
93. "liver of blaspheming jew,
gall of goat, and slips of yew
slivered in the moon's eclipse,
nose of turk, and tartar's lips,
finger of birth-strangled babe
ditch-delivered by a drab,
make the gruel thick and slab."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1
94. "by the pricking of my thumbs,
something wicked this way comes."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1
95. "how now, you secret, black, and midnight hags!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1
96. "a deed without a name."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1
97. "be bloody, bold, and resolute; laugh to scorn
the power of man, for none of woman born
shall harm macbeth."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1
98. "i'll make assurance double sure,
and take a bond of fate."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1
99. "macbeth shall never vanquished be until
great birnam wood to high dunsinane hill
shall come against him."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1
100. "the weird sisters."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.1.
101. "when our actions do not,
our fears do make us traitors."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.2
102. "he loves us not;
he wants the natural touch.
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.2
103. "son: and must they all be hanged that swear and lie?
lady macduff: every one.
son: who must hang them?
lady macduff: why, the honest men.
son: then the liars and swearers are fools, for there are liars and swearers enow to beat the honest men, and hang up them.
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.2
104. "stands scotland where it did?
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.3
105. "give sorrow words: the grief that does not speak
whispers the o'er-fraught heart and bids it break."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.3
106. "what, all my pretty chickens and their dam
at one fell swoop?"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 4.3
107. "out, damned spot! out, i say!"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.1
108. "fie, my lord, fie! a soldier, and afeard?"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.1
109. "yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him?"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.1
110. "the thane of fife had a wife: where is she now?"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.1
111. "all the perfumes of arabia will not sweeten this little hand."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.1
112. "what's done cannot be undone."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5. 1
113. "foul whisperings are abroad. unnatural deeds
do breed unnatural troubles; infected minds
to their deaf pillows will discharge their secrets;
more needs she the divine than the physician."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.1
114. "now does he feel his title
hang loose about him, like a giant's robe
upon a dwarfish thief."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.2
115. "till birnam wood remove to dunsinane,
i cannot taint with fear."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.3
116. "the devil damn thee black, thou cream-faced loon!
where gott'st thou that goose look?"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.3
117. "i have lived long enough: my way of life
is fall'n into the sere, the yellow leaf;
and that which should accompany old age,
as honor, love, obedience, troops of friends,
i must not look to have; but in their stead
curses, not loud but deep, mouth-honor, breath,
which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare not."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.3
118. "canst thou not minister to a mind diseased,
pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow,
raze out the written troubles of the brain,
and with some sweet oblivious antidote
cleanse the stuffed bosom of that perilous stuff
which weighs upon the heart?"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.3
119. "the patient
must minister to himself."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.3
here are even more quotes from macbeth, by william shakespeare.
120. "throw physic to the dogs: i'll none of it."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5. 3
121. "the cry is still, 'they come!'"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.5
122. "i have almost forgot the taste of fears.
the time has been my senses would have cooled
to hear a night-shriek, and my fell of hair
would at a dismal treatise rouse and stir
as life were in't: i have supped full with horrors;
direness, familiar to my slaughterous thoughts,
cannot once start me."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.5
123. "to-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow,
creeps in this petty pace from day to day
to the last syllable of recorded time,
and all our yesterdays have lighted fools
the way to dusty death. out, out, brief candle!
life's but a walking shadow, a poor player
that struts and frets his hour upon the stage
and then is heard no more: it is a tale
told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
signifying nothing."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.5
124. "i 'gin to be aweary of the sun,
and wish the estate o' the world were now undone.
ring the alarum-bell! blow, wind! come, wrack!
at least we'll die with harness on our back.
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.5
125. "those clamorous harbingers of blood and death."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.6
126. "i bear a charmed life."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5. 8
127. "macduff was from his mother's womb
untimely ripped."
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.7
128. "lay on, macduff,
and damned be him that first cries, 'hold, enough!'"
- william shakespeare, macbeth, 5.8