“Into the air; and what seem’d corporal, / Melted as breath into the wind.Act I, Scene 3 · Macbeth · ★★★☆☆→
“We will establish our estate upon / Our eldest, Malcolm; whom we name hereafter / The Prince of Cumberland: which honour must / Not unaccompanied invest him only, / But signs of nobleness, like stars, shall shine / On all deservers.—Act I, Scene 4 · Duncan · ★★★☆☆→
“The obscure bird / Clamour’d the live-long night. Some say the earth / Was feverous, and did shake.Act II, Scene 3 · Lennox · ★★★☆☆→
“The west yet glimmers with some streaks of day. / Now spurs the lated traveller apace, / To gain the timely inn; and near approaches / The subject of our watch.Act III, Scene 3 · ★★★☆☆→
“Stones have been known to move, and trees to speak; / Augurs, and understood relations, have / By magot-pies, and choughs, and rooks, brought forth / The secret’st man of blood.—Act III, Scene 4 · Macbeth · ★★★☆☆→
“If charnel houses and our graves must send / Those that we bury back, our monuments / Shall be the maws of kites.Act III, Scene 4 · Macbeth · ★★★☆☆→
“Safe in a ditch he bides, / With twenty trenched gashes on his head; / The least a death to nature.Act III, Scene 4 · ★★★☆☆→
“Some holy angel / Fly to the court of England, and unfold / His message ere he come, that a swift blessing / May soon return to this our suffering country / Under a hand accurs’d!Act III, Scene 6 · Lennox · ★★★☆☆→
“Horrible sight!—Now I see ’tis true; / For the blood-bolter’d Banquo smiles upon me, / And points at them for his.—Act IV, Scene 1 · Macbeth · ★★★☆☆→
“That will never be: / Who can impress the forest; bid the tree / Unfix his earth-bound root?Act IV, Scene 1 · Macbeth · ★★★☆☆→