GCSE Lit Revision: Mac, AIC and L&R

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kill her

Each of you helped to ______ ______.

nasty temper

Eric (on Sheila): She's got a _________ __________ sometimes - but she's not bad really.

tough luck

Eric: He could have kept her on instead of throwing her out. I call it ________ ________.

harm

Eva Smith's gone. You can't do her any more ________.

bold girl winking in Portobello

Even then I wanted the b___ g____ w________ i__ P_____________, somewhere in Scotland, before I was born.

dusty and cracked

First, the old brogues, d_______ a___ c__________;

gallant

Gerald (on the break-up with Daisy): She was very ________ about it... ...She told me she'd been happier than she'd ever been before - but that she knew it couldn't last.

respectable citizens

Gerald: Getting a bit heavy-handed, aren't you, Inspector? After all, y'know, we're _________ __________ and not criminals.

soft brown hair and big dark eyes

Gerald: I hate those hard-eyed dough-faced women. But then I noticed a girl who looked quite different. She was very pretty - _______ ________ _______ and ____ ______ _______.

Buckingham Palace

Gerald: I met her first in the stalls bar at the Palace. I mean the Palace music hall here in Brumley - Sheila: Well, we didn't think you meant _______________ ___________.

most important

Gerald: I suppose it was inevitable. She was young and pretty and warm-hearted - and intensely grateful. I became at once the _______ ____________ person in her life.

women of the town

Gerald: I went down into the bar for a drink. It's a favourite haunt of ________ ______ ______ ________.

suicide business

Gerald: I'm sorry, Sheila. But it was all over and done with last summer. I don't come into this __________ ________.

long, exciting and tiring

Gerald: Inspector, I think Miss Birling ought to be excused any more of this questioning. She's nothing more to tell you. She's had a _______, ___________ ____ _________ day...

young and fresh and charming

Gerald: She was ________ ____ _________ ____ __________ and altogether out of place down there.

Old Joe Meggarty

Gerald: _____ ______ ___________, half-drunk and goggle-eyed, had wedged her into a corner with that obscene fat carcass of his...

nature's give-and-take

Has something I never quite grasp to convey About n_______'s g_____-a___-t_______

stiff white cloth

Has spread the s_____ w______ c______ over the grass.

drink

He needs a __________ now just to see him through.

our police inspector

He was ________ ________ __________ all right.

wheat

Her hair, the colour of _________, takes on the light.

Mapping the furrow exactly

His eye Narrowed and angled at the ground, M__________ t___ f__________ e_________.

Between the shafts and the furrow

His shoulders globed like a full sail strung B___________ t___ s________ a__ t____ f_________.

proved in the letting go

How selfhood begins with a walking away, And love is __________ ____ _______ __________ ____.

walking away

I can see You _____________ _________ from me towards the school

a rope or net

I decide to do it free, without __ ______ ___ ____.

it would be like this

I had not thought that ___ ________ ___ ______ ______.

fat old tarts

I hate these ______ ______ __________ round the town.

Gnaws at my mind still

I have had worse partings, but none that so G_______ a__ m__ m_____ s______.

is not as hard as you might think

I hear them call, 'See where the stream-path is! Crossing i__ n___ a__ h____ a__ y____ m_____ t______.'

dance like that

I knew you would __________ ________ ________.

to fall or fly

I reach towards a hatch that opens on an endless sky ____ ______ ___ _____.

high-heeled red shoes

I remember my hands in those h____-h_______ r___ s______, relics,

climb

I space-walk through the empty bedrooms, __________

polished sod

I stumbled in his hob-nailed wake, Fell sometimes on the ____________ _____;

nice people

I suppose we're all ________ ________ now.

stiffen my arm

I wanted to grow up and plough, To close one eye, s________ m___ a______.

squiffy

I was a bit ___________.

nuisance, tripping, falling

I was a n__________, t_________, f_________, Yapping always.

nasty

I was in that state when a chap easily turns ____________.

liked her

I wasn't in love with her or anything - but I ________ ______.

ballroom with the thousand eyes, the fizzy, movie tomorrows

I'm not here yet. The thought of me doesn't occur in the ba__________ w____ t___ t_________ e_____, t___ f_____, m______ t____________ the right walk home could bring.

ten years away from the corner you laugh on

I'm te___ y_______ a______ f____ t___ c________ y___ l_______ o__ with your pals, Maggie McGeeney and Jean Duff.

cover this up

I've got to ________ ______ ______ as soon as I can.

lucky for us

If it didn't end tragically, then that's ________ ______ ______.

fire and blood and anguish

If men will not learn that lesson, they will be taught it in ______ ______ ______ ______ ________.

meet and mingle

In one spirit m_____ a___ m________. Why not I with thine?—

Before You Were Mine

In this poem, the speaker addresses her mother directly, as if addressing a past version of her in a photograph. It was written by the current Poet Laureate, Carol Ann Duffy. She says that the poem is 'entirely autobiographical'.

living on the moon

Inspector (sharply, to Birling): Your daughter isn't _________ ____ _____ _______. She's here in Brumley too.

unpleasant and disturbing things

Inspector (to Gerald): You think young women ought to be protected against __________ ______ __________ ________?

stammer and yammer

Inspector (to Mr Birling) Don't ______________ ______ ____________ at me again man!

confession of responsibility

Inspector (to Mrs Birling): Make an example of the young man, eh? Public ____________ ______ __________ - um?

tone

Inspector, I've told you before, I don't like your ________...

chain of events

Inspector: ... what happened to her then may have determined what happened to her afterwards, and what happened to her afterwards may have driven her to suicide. A _________ ____ _________.

dingy little back bedrooms

Inspector: ...it would do us all a bit of good if sometimes we tried to put ourselves in the place of these young women counting their pennies in their ________ _________ ______ ___________.

burnt-out inside on a slab

Inspector: Her position now is that she lies with a ________-_____ ________ ___ __ ______.

guilt

Inspector: If there's nothing else, we'll have to share our ________.

ask for the earth

Inspector: It's better to ______ ______ ______ ________ than to take it.

ask questions

Inspector: It's my duty to ______ ______________.

line of enquiry

Inspector: It's the way I like to go to work. One person and one ________ ___ ________ at a time...

Daisy Renton

Inspector: Now she had to try something else. So first she changed her name to ____________ ______________.

responsibilities

Inspector: Public men, Mr Birling, have ________________ as well as privileges.

slammed the door in her face

Inspector: She was here alone, friendless, almost penniless, desperate. She needed not only money but advice, sympathy, friendliness. You've had children. You must have known what she was feeling. And you __________ _____ _______ ____ _____ _______.

strong disinfectant

Inspector: She'd swallowed a lot of ________ ___________. Burnt her insides out, of course.

nasty mess

Inspector: That's more or less what I was thinking tonight when I was in the Infirmary looking at what was left of Eva Smith. A nice little promising life there, I thought, and a ________ _______ somebody's made of it.

leaves just turning

It is eighteen years ago, almost to the day - A sunny day with l________ j______ t___________,

beckon to me from the other bank

Leisurely, They b________ t__ m__ f______ t___ o_____ b____.

requires a second pair of hands.

Mother, any distance greater than a single span

defending

Mr Birling: Sheila, I'm not ____________ him, but you must understand that a lot of young men...

drink far too much

Mrs Birling (talking about Eric): He's only a boy. Inspector: No, he's a young man - and some young men ________ ______ ________ ________.

hysterical child

Mrs Birling (to Sheila, severely): You're behaving like an _______ _____ tonight.

girl of that sort

Mrs Birling: As if a ________ ______ ________ ________ would ever refuse money.

ashamed

Mrs Birling: I did nothing I'm ______________ of or that won't bear investigation.

class

Mrs Birling: I don't suppose for a moment that we can understand why the girl committed suicide. Girls of that ________...

father

Mrs Birling: I'll tell you what I told her. Go and look for the ____________ of the child. It's his responsibility.

elaborate fine feelings and scruples

Mrs Birling: She was giving herself ridiculous airs. She was claiming ___________ ______ ___________ ____ ___________ that were simply absurd in a girl in her position.

A stone along the water

My father spins __ _________ _______ ____ ________.

horse-plough

My father worked with a ________-___________

Genuine Irish Tweed

My father, twenty-five, in the same suit Of G___________ I______ T__________,

Over the drifted stream

My mother shades her eyes and looks my way O_____ t___ d_________ s_______.

sprigged dress Drawn at the waist

My mother, twenty-three, in a s___________ d_____ D_______ a__ t____w______, ribbon in her straw hat,

disdained its brother

No sister-flower would be forgiven If it d___________ i___ b____________;

law divine

Nothing in the world is single; All things by a l___ d_______

heavier price

Now she'll make you pay a ________ ________ still.

glassy ridge of a scar

On his arm I discover the g_________ r_______ o__ __ s_____, place my feet gently in the old stitches and move on.

God alone

Perhaps it is roughly Saying what _______ ________ could perfectly show -

pupil slowly open and close

Refreshed, I cross the screed cheek, to stare into his brown eyes, watch a p______ s_______ o_____ a___ c_______.

clasp one another

See the mountains kiss high heaven And the waves c______ o___ a___________;

tea from a Thermos

She pours t___ f____ _ T_________, the milk straight From an old H.P. sauce-bottle

silly word

Sheila (after 'a short, hysterical laugh'): I don't know. Perhaps it's because impertinent is such a _______ _______.

hang ourselves

Sheila (rather wildly, with a laugh) He's giving us the rope - so that we'll ______ __________.

kind of wall

Sheila (to her mother): You mustn't try to build up a ______ ___ _______ between us and that girl. If you do, the Inspector will just break it down.

fairy prince

Sheila (with sharp sarcasm): You were the wonderful _________ __________. You must have adored it, Gerald.

selfish vindictive creature

Sheila(to Gerald): You've made your mind up I must obviously be a ______ ________ __________.

cheap labour

Sheila: But these girls aren't ________ ________ - they're people.

hysterical

Sheila: He means that I'm getting ______________ now.

impertinent

Sheila: I was absolutely furious. I went to the manager and told him that this girl had been very ____________.

miserable plain little creature

Sheila: If she'd been some _________ __________ ______ ______, I don't suppose I'd have done it. But she was very pretty and looked as if she could take care of herself. I couldn't be sorry for her.

the same people

Sheila: In fact, in some odd way, I rather respect you more than I've ever done before... but this has made a difference. You and I aren't _____ ________ _________ who sat down to dinner here.

Mother

Sheila: Of course, __________. It was obvious from the start. Go on, Gerald. Don't mind ___________.

keen lessons that love deceives

Since then, k____ l_________ t___ l____ d_____________, And wrings with wrong, have shaped to me

Dipping and rising to his plod

Sometimes he rode me on his back _______________________________________________.

sparkle and waltz and laugh

That glamorous love lasts where you s________ a___ w______ a___ l__________ before you were mine.

winged seed loosened from its parent stem

That hesitant figure, eddying away Like a w_________ s_______ l___________ f______ i___ p_______ s_______,

my loud, possessive yell

The decade ahead of m__ l_____, p__________ y___ was the best one, eh?

And the rivers with the ocean

The fountains mingle with the river A___ t___ r______ w_____ t___ o_______,

clicking tongue

The horse strained at his ____________ _____________.

brighter and harder

The lighting on the stage starts off 'pink and intimate' but, when the Inspector arrives, it becomes ____________ _____ ___________.

splintered and give good purchase

The nails are s_____________ a___ g_____ g_____ p____________,

lit by three suns

The sky whitens as if ___ ___ ______ _____.

deadest thing

The smile on your mouth was the ___________ ________ Alive enough to have strength to die;

without breaking

The sod rolled over w_________ b____________.

shriek at the pavement

The three of you bend from the waist, holding each other, or your knees, and s_______ a___ t___ p___________.

Your first game of football

The touch-lines new-ruled - since I watched you play Y______ f______ g______ o__ f___________,

sweet emotion

The winds of heaven mix for ever With a ________ ____________;

soft and white at this altitude

Then up over the forehead, the wrinkles well-spaced and easy, to his thick hair (s_____ a___ w______ a__ t_____ a___________)

public scandal

There'll be a ________ ____________.

somewhere beyond Eden Rock

They are waiting for me s__________ b________ E_____ R______:

Porphyria's Lover

This Victorian poem is one of the many dramatic monologues written by Robert Browning. Like many of these dramatic monologues, it is written in rhyming couplets and is told from the point of view of a dangerous, complex character. The name in the poem's title translates as 'purple', a colour associated with royalty. It is also the name of a disease that can cause madness.

Robert Browning

This Victorian poet was born in 1812 and died in 1889. He became known for dramatic monologues, often voiced by dark, troubled personas. He married one of the other poets in the 'Love and Relationships' cluster.

Winter Swans

This is a contemporary poem, taken from a collection by Owen Sheers called 'Skirrid Hill'. In Welsh, the word 'Skirrid' means 'shattered', but can also be interpreted as meaning 'divorced' or 'separate'.

Mother, any distance

This poem comes from a collection called 'Book of Matches', named because the poet intended for the poems to be read in the time it takes for a match to burn. Simon Armitage often writes about complex, universal ideas (family, growing up, etc.) using everyday events.

Sonnet 29 - 'I think of thee'

This poem is a sonnet: a regular, 14 line love poem. It was written by Elizabeth Barrett-Browning. Her husband, Robert Browning, urged her to publish her sonnets, even though they were deeply personal, and, for Victorian tastes, shockingly open, emotional and revealing. Even though women were expected to be demure, this poem bursts with emotion.

Singh Song!

This poem is about the merging of two cultures. The poet, Daljit Nagra, is a British Asian whose parents moved to the UK from India in the 1950s. His family opened a corner shop when they moved to Sheffield. In this light-hearted love poem, Nagra pokes fun at Indian stereotypes.

Walking Away

This poem is written about the poet's son. Like many of Cecil Day Lewis's poems, it uses images of nature to describe personal experiences. In this poem, the poet looks back on a memory from eighteen years ago that still 'gnaws' at him.

Love's Philosophy

This poem suggests there is a higher knowledge or wisdom about love than the thoughts and feelings of individual people, as though there are generally accepted, logical, unwritten laws about love. Shelley is suggesting that we are governed by these natural instincts.

Letters from Yorkshire

This poem was published in 2002. It deals with themes of longing, love and distance. It was written by Maura Dooley.

Climbing My Grandfather

This poem was written by Andrew Waterhouse. It uses an extended metaphor in which getting to know a family member in described in terms of climbing a mountain.

The Farmer's Bride

This poem was written by Charlotte Mew, a Victorian poet who had a hard upbringing in poverty. It is a dramatic monologue, and, like many of Mew's poems, it adopts a male perspective on relationships.

Follower

This poem was written by Irish poet Seamus Heaney. It focuses on his relationship with his father.

Eden Rock

This poem, written by Charles Causley, is nostalgic, symbolic and partly autobiographical. Causley's father died when he was around 7 years old. The poem was published after his mother died, when he was well into his old age.

Simon Armitage

This poet is a Yorkshireman, born in 1963. He recently became Oxford Professor of Poetry. At one time, he worked as a probation officer in Manchester. He often writes about universal ideas (family, growing up, etc.) using everyday events.

Lord Byron

This poet was born in 1788 and died in 1824. He was labelled 'mad, bad and dangerous to know.' He is one of the 'big six' of the Romantic period and was famous for his life of excess: love affairs, huge debts, etc.

Elizabeth Barrett Browning

This poet was born in 1806 and died in 1861. She suffered from ill health for much of her life. Her father was overbearing and refused to allow his daughters to marry. She wrote letters to Robert Browning and they eventually eloped. As a result, she was disinherited by her father.

Thomas Hardy

This poet was born in 1840 and died in 1928. He was a Victorian poet and he wrote many poems about failed relationships. He also wrote famous novels, e.g. 'Tess of the D'Urbervilles' and 'Jude the Obscure'.

Charlotte Mew

This poet was born in 1869 and died in 1928. Her career spanned the Victorian and Edwardian eras and she was also a WWI poet. Many of her family members suffered with mental health problems and she was terrified of experiencing the same difficulties. She vowed never to marry; most of her romantic attachments were to women. She took her own life after the death of her last remaining sibling.

Cecil Day-Lewis

This poet was born in 1904 and died in 1972. He was the Poet Laureate from 1968 until his death. His poetry is often romantic and uses nature to explore personal experiences. One of his sons, Daniel, became the only man to win Best Actor at the Academy Awards three times.

Seamus Heaney

This poet was born in 1939 and died in 2013. He was brought up in a simple, rural family and was the eldest of 8 children.He became an English teacher and began to write poetry.He became the Professor of Poetry at Oxford andin 1995 won the Nobel prize for literature.He was also offered the role of Poet Laureate (the national poet) but he turned it down because of his strong Irish roots and identity.

Carol Ann Duffy

This poet was born in 1955. She is the current Poet Laureate. She was raised in Scotland before moving to England as a child. Her poem is autobiographical and was published in 1993.

Maura Dooley

This poet was born in 1957 in Cornwall. She went to University in York and she lived in Yorkshire for some years before moving to London. She is a freelance writer and teaches Creative Writing at the University of London.

Andrew Waterhouse

This poet was born in 1958 and died in 2001. He was a teacher, environmentalist, poet and musician. He committed suicide, havibng suffered from depression throughout his life. He was described in his obituary as imagining a 'world... full of solid objects and hard edges, stones, wood and frozen ground.

Daljit Nagra

This poet was born in 1966. His parents travelled to the UK from India and set up a corner shop in Sheffield. One of the things which he celebrates in his poems is the Indian accent.

Charles Causley

This poet was brought up in Cornwall. He was a private man and believed everything people needed to know about him was contained within his poems. His father died when he was young, which may explain the idea he explores in 'Eden Rock'.

Percy Bysshe Shelley

This poet was one of the 'big six' of the Romantic movement. He was a vegetarian, a political poet and an atheist. He was expelled from Oxford for his views. He had some scandalous relationships, and is known for his marriage to Mary Shelley, the author of 'Frankenstein.'

Owen Sheers

This poet wrote 'Winter Swans'. He was born in 1974 and he is Welsh. He wrote a collection called 'Skirrid Hill'.

Neutral Tones

Thomas Hardy wrote this poem. Much of his poetry is autobiographical, about his relationships and the failure of his relationships. Much of his poetry was about his estranged wife, Emma, whom he mourned for the rest of his life. This poem, however, was written about a previous relationship that did not last. Although a Victorian novelist and poet, Hardy was influenced by the Romantic poets.

responsible

We are members of one body. We are _________ for each other.

chidden of God

We stood by a pond that winter day, And the sun was white, as though __________ __ _____,

kiss not me

What is all this sweet work worth If thou ______ _____ ____?

half-fledged thing set free

With the pathos of a h_____-f__________ t_____ s___ f____ Into a wilderness,

back to base

You at the zero-end, me with the spool of tape, recording length, reporting metres, centimetres ______ ____ ________,

the acres of the walls, the prairies of the floors.

You come to help me measure windows, pelmets, doors, t___ a_______ o__ t_____ w_______, t___ p________ o__ t____ f_______.

easier

You haven't made it any ______________ for me, have you, mother?

stole

You mean - you ________ the money?

money

You're offering ________ at the wrong time, Mr Birling.

tedious riddles of years ago

Your eyes on me were as eyes that rove Over t_________ r_______ o__ y______ a___;

pond edged with greyish leaves

Your face, and the God curst sun, and a tree, And a p_____ e_______ w____ g________ l________.

damn

Your own grandchild... You killed them both - ________ you!

blows round your legs

Your polka-dot dress b_______ r______ y______ l______. Marilyn.

spoilt

Your trouble is - you've been __________.

screw of paper

a s______ o__ p_______ for a cork

get a grip

an easy scramble onto his trousers, pushing into the weave, trying to ______ ___ ______.

ghost clatters toward me

and now your g_____ c________ t_______ m__ over George Square

slow pulse of his good heart

feeling his heat, knowing the s_____ p______ o__ h___ g______ h______.

two years old and trembling at his feet

his terrier Jack Still t____ y______ o___ a___ t___________ a__ h___ f_____.

gasping for breath I can only lie

reaching for the summit, where g__________ f___ b_______ __ c____ o_____ l___ watching clouds and birds circle

same three plates, the tin cups painted blue

slowly sets out The s____ t_____p_____, t___ t____ c_____ p________ b_____.

where the path should be

the gait of one Who finds no path _________ ______ _______ _________ ____.

something has to give

the ladder to the loft, to breaking point, where _______________ ______ _____ ________;

warm ice

the skin of his finger is smooth and thick like _______ _____.

which fire one's irresolute clay

the small, the scorching Ordeals w_______ f____o____'s i______________ c_____.

smiling mouth to drink among teeth

then pull myself up the loose skin of his neck to a s_________ m______ t__ d______ a______ t______.

satellite Wrenched from its orbit

then, like a s_____________ W____________ f______ i___ o________, go drifting away Behind a scatter of boys.

clear as scent, under the tree, with its lights

till I see you, c______ a__ s_______, u______ t___ t____, w____ i__ l_________, and whose small bites on your neck, sweetheart?

the last one-hundredth of an inch

two floors below your fingertips still pinch t___ l______ o___-h____________ o__ a__ i______...

years between us. Anchor. Kite.

...then leaving up the stairs, the line still feeding out, unreeling ________ __________ ____. ___________. ________.

When We Two Parted

A Romantic poem. The poet, Lord Byron, was notorious and labelled 'mad, bad and dangerous to know.' Byron has many scandalous relationships during his lifetime. This poem is apparently about Byron's relationship with Lady Frances Webster, who was also said to be involved in an affair with the Duke of Wellington.

foul is fair

Act 1 Scene 1 WITCHES: Fair is foul, and __________________.

minion

Act 1 Scene 2 CAPTAIN: (Macbeth) Like Valour's ________ carved out his passage Till he faced the slave

unseamed

Act 1 Scene 2 CAPTAIN: ...he ___________ him from the nave to th'chaps And fixed his head upon our battlements.

Bellona's bridegroom

Act 1 Scene 2 ROSS: That B__________ b___________

brave

Act 1 Scene 2 CAPTAIN: For __________ Macbeth - well he deserves that name...

instruments of darkness

Act 1 Scene 3 BANQUO: Oftentimes, to win us to our harm, The _____________ ____ ______________ tell us truths...

function is smothered in surmise

Act 1 Scene 3 MACBETH: My thought, whose murder yet is but fantastical, Shakes so my single state of man that _____________ ____ ________________ _____ _________, and nothing is, But what is not.

without my stir

Act 1 Scene 3 MACBETH: If chance will have me king, why chance may crown me ___________ _____ ________.

foul and fair

Act 1 Scene 3 MACBETH: So _________ ______ ________ a day I have not seen.

unfix my hair

Act 1 Scene 3 MACBETH: Why do I yield to that suggestion, Whose horrid image doth __________ _____ _____________ And make my seated heart knock at my ribs...

images of death

Act 1 Scene 3 ROSS: He finds thee in the stout Norwegian ranks, Nothing afeard of what thyself didst make, Strange __________ _____ __________.

mind's construction

Act 1 Scene 4 DUNCAN: There's no art to find the ______ ___________ in the face.

black and deep desires

Act 1 Scene 4 MACBETH: Stars, hide your fires, Let not light see my ______ _____ _______ _________

unsex me here

Act 1 Scene 5 LADY MACBETH: Come, you spirits That tend on mortal thoughts, _______ ____ _______, And fill me from the crown to the toe top-full Of direst cruelty!

future

Act 1 Scene 5 LADY MACBETH: I feel now the _______ in the instant.

serpent under't

Act 1 Scene 5 LADY MACBETH: Look like the innocent flower, But be the __________ ________.

the milk of human kindness

Act 1 Scene 5 LADY MACBETH: Yet I do fear thy nature, It is too full of ______________________________ To catch the nearest way.

screw your courage

Act 1 Scene 7 LADY MACBETH: ...__________ ________ _________ to the sticking place And we'll not fail.

dashed the brains out

Act 1 Scene 7 LADY MACBETH: I would, while it was smiling in my face, Have plucked my nipple from his boneless gums And ___________ ______ ___________ _______, had I so sworn As you have done to this.

then you were a man

Act 1 Scene 7 LADY MACBETH: When you durst do it, _________________.

horrid deed in every eye

Act 1 Scene 7 MACBETH: And pity, like a naked newborn babe... Shall blow the _________________________________...

bend up

Act 1 Scene 7 MACBETH: I am settled and __________ ______ Each corporal agent to this terrible feat.

Vaulting ambition which o'erleaps itself

Act 1 Scene 7 MACBETH: I have no spur To prick the sides of my intent, but only ____________ ______________, __________ __________ _________

assassination

Act 1 Scene 7 MACBETH: If the _____________________ Could trammel up consequence... this blow Might be the be-all and the end-all...

false heart doth know

Act 1 Scene 7 MACBETH: False face must hide what the...

heat-oppressed brain

Act 2 Scene 1 MACBETH: ...art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation, Proceeding from the ____________________________?

summons thee to heaven or to hell

Act 2 Scene 1 MACBETH: I go, and it is done; the bell invites me. Hear it not, Duncan; for it is a knell That ___________________________________________.

wicked dreams

Act 2 Scene 1 MACBETH: Now o'er the one halfworld Nature seems dead, and ________________ abuse The curtain'd sleep

clears us of this deed

Act 2 Scene 2 LADY MACBETH: My hands are of your colour; but I shame To wear a heart so white... ...A little water _____________________.

mad

Act 2 Scene 2 LADY MACBETH: These deeds must not be thought After these ways; so, it will make us _______.

unbend your noble strength

Act 2 Scene 2 LADY MACBETH: Why, worthy thane, You do ____________________________, to think So brainsickly of things.

hangman's

Act 2 Scene 2 MACBETH: One cried 'God bless us!' and 'Amen' the other; As they had seen me with these _____________ hands.

murdered sleep

Act 2 Scene 2 MACBETH: Still it cried 'Sleep no more!' to all the house: 'Glamis hath ________________, and therefore Cawdor Shall sleep no more; Macbeth shall sleep no more.'

incarnadine

Act 2 Scene 2 MACBETH: What hands are here? ha! they pluck out mine eyes. Will all great Neptune's ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? No, this my hand will rather The multitudinous seas ________________, Making the green one red.

equivocator

Act 2 Scene 3 PORTER: Faith, here's an __________________, that could swear in both the scales against either scale; who committed treason enough for God's sake, yet could not equivocate to heaven

royalty of nature

Act 3 Scene 1 MACBETH: Our fears in Banquo Stick deep; and in his ___________ ____ ___________ Reigns that which would be fear'd.

fruitless crown

Act 3 Scene 1 MACBETH: Upon my head they placed a _____________ __________, And put a barren sceptre in my gripe.

without content

Act 3 Scene 2 LADY MACBETH: Nought's had, all's spent, Where our desire is got _________ _______________.

vizards

Act 3 Scene 2 MACBETH: (we must) make our faces ___________ to our hearts, Disguising what they are.

chuck

Act 3 Scene 2 MACBETH: Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest _________, Till thou applaud the deed.

bloody and invisible hand

Act 3 Scene 2 MACBETH: Come, seeling night, Scarf up the tender eye of pitiful day; And with thy __________ _____ ____________ _________ Cancel and tear to pieces that great bond Which keeps me pale!

scorpions

Act 3 Scene 2 MACBETH: O, full of _____________ is my mind, dear wife!

go at once

Act 3 Scene 4 LADY MACBETH: Stand not upon the order of your going, / But ______________.

blood

Act 3 Scene 4 MACBETH: I am in _________ Stepp'd in so far that, should I wade no more, Returning were as tedious as go o'er...

saucy doubts and fears

Act 3 Scene 4 MACBETH: Then comes my fit again: I had else been perfect... But now I am cabin'd, cribb'd, confined, bound in To s___________________________.

degrees

Act 3 Scene 4 MACBETH: You know your own ___________; sit down: at first / And last the hearty welcome.

bloody, bold

Act 4 Scene 1 APPARITION: Be _______, _____, and resolute. Laugh to scorn the power of man, for none of woman born shall harm Macbeth.

infected

Act 4 Scene 1 MACBETH (on the witches): _____________ be the air whereon they ride, / And damned all those that trust them!

the firstlings of my hand

Act 4 Scene 1 MACBETH: ...from this moment The very firstlings of my heart shall be _____________________________.

crack of doom

Act 4 Scene 1 MACBETH: Thou art too like the spirit of Banquo: down! Thy crown does sear mine eye-balls... ... What, will the line stretch out to the ________________?

folly

Act 4 Scene 2 LADY MACDUFF: I am in this earthly world, where to do harm is often laudable, to do good sometime accounted dangerous _______.

honest men

Act 4 Scene 2 MACDUFF's SON: The liars and swearers are fools ; for there are liars and swearers enough to beat the __________ _____ and hang up them.

sweeten this little hand

Act 5 Scene 1 LADY MACBETH: Here's the smell of the blood still: all the perfumes of Arabia will not ______________________________. Oh, oh, oh!

murky

Act 5 Scene 1 LADY MACBETH: Out, damned spot! out, I say!--One: two: why, then, 'tis time to do't.--Hell is __________!

where is she now

Act 5 Scene 1 LADY MACBETH: The thane of Fife had a wife: _____________________________?

the old man to have so much blood in him

Act 5 Scene 1 LADY MACBETH: Yet who would have thought ____________________________________________________?

Hang loose about him

Act 5 Scene 2 ANGUS: (Angus): Now does he feel His secret murders sticking on his hands... ...now does he feel his title _______________________, like a giant's robe Upon a dwarfish thief.

valiant fury

Act 5 Scene 2 CAITHNESS: Some say he's mad; others that lesser hate him / Do call it ________________...

sweet oblivious antidote

Act 5 Scene 3 MACBETH asks the doctor for a 's_________ o__________ a___________' to help free Lady Macbeth from her hallucinations. You get the feeling that he wants one too.

sere

Act 5 Scene 3 MACBETH: I have lived long enough: my way of life Is fall'n into the ______...

from my bones my flesh be hacked

Act 5 Scene 3 MACBETH: I'll fight till ___________________________________.

undone

Act 5 Scene 5 MACBETH: I gin to be aweary of the sun, And wish the estate o' the world were now ___________. Ring the alarum-bell! Blow, wind! come, wrack! At least we'll die with harness on our back.

full with horrors

Act 5 Scene 5 MACBETH: I have almost forgot the taste of fears... ...I have supp'd _______________________; Direness, familiar to my slaughterous thoughts Cannot once start me.

equivocation

Act 5 Scene 5 MACBETH: I pull in resolution, and begin To doubt the _________________ of the fiend That lies like truth...

sound and fury

Act 5 Scene 5 MACBETH: 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 ____________________, Signifying nothing.

dusty death

Act 5 Scene 5 MACBETH: 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 _________________.

juggling fiends

Act 5 Scene 8 MACBETH: ...be these _______________ no more believed, That palter with us in a double sense; That keep the word of promise to our ear, And break it to our hope.

rabble's curse

Act 5 Scene 8 MACBETH: I will not yield, To kiss the ground before young Malcolm's feet, And to be baited with the ___________________.

fiend-like

Act 5 Scene 8 MALCOLM: ...this dead butcher and his _______________ queen, Who, as 'tis thought, by self and violent hands Took off her life...

broad shadow round the farm

All I ever did was follow In his b_______ s_________ r_______ t___ f_______.

bright steel-pointed sock

An expert. He would set the wing And fit the b______ s______-p________ s_____.

lay on the starving sod

And a few leaves ____ __ ____ ___________ ______; - They had fallen from an ash, and were grey.

ominous bird a-wing

And a grin of bitterness swept thereby Like an o___________ b____ __-w_____....

lost the more by our love

And some words played between us to and fro On which l____ t___ m____ b__ o___ l_____.

moonbeams kiss the sea

And the sunlight clasps the earth And the m____________ k____ t____ s_____:

still firm shoulder

At his s____ f_____ s___________, I rest for a while in the shade, not looking down, for climbing has its dangers

sweating team turned round

At the headrig, with a single pluck Of reins, the s___________ t_______ t__________ r_______ And back into the land.

mummy and daddy

At the start of the play, Sheila speaks 'gaily, possessively' , 'half serious and half playful' and 'with mock aggressiveness'. She addresses her parents as _________ _____ _________.

hiding for the late one

Before you were mine, your Ma stands at the close with a h_______ f___ t___ l_____ o____. You reckon it's worth it.

son-in-law

Birling (to Gerald): You're just the kind of ______-____-_____ I always wanted.

Horrid business

Birling (to the Inspector): Yes, yes. __________ _____________.

lower costs and higher prices

Birling: ...perhaps we may look forward to a time when Crofts and Birlings are no longer competing but are working together - for _________ _________ _____ __________ ________.

unsinkable

Birling: ...the Titanic - she sails next week.... New York in five days - and every luxury - and ______________, absolutely _____________.

bees in a hive

Birling: ...you'd think everybody has to look after everybody else, as if we were all mixed up together like ________ ______ ______ ________. Community and all that nonsense.

himself

Birling: A man has to make his own way - has to look after ____________...

responsibility

Birling: I can't accept any ________________.

Honours List

Birling: I might find my way on to the next __________ ______________. Just a knighthood, of course.

hard-headed

Birling: I'm talking as a ______-___________, practical man of business.

wretched girl

Birling: Obviously it has nothing whatever to do with the _________ ________'s suicide. Eh, Inspector?

had to go

Birling: She'd had a lot to say - far too much - so she _______ ___ ________.

war

Birling: The Germans don't want ______. Nobody wants ______.... The world's developing so fast that it'll make ______ impossible.

rapid progress

Birling: There'll be peace and prosperity and ________ ___________ everywhere...

keep changing

Birling: Well, we've several hundred young women there, y'know, and they _______ ___________.

fiddlesticks

Birling: You'll hear some people say that war's inevitable. And to that, I say ___________.

my father who keeps stumbling

But today It is m__ f_______ w___ k_______ s__________ Behind me, and will not go away.

fake

By Jingo - a ________!

traverse along his belt

By the overhanging shirt I change direction, t________ a______ h___ b____ to an earth-stained hand.

stamping stars from the wrong pavement

Cha cha cha! You'd teach me the steps on the way home from Mass, ___________ ________ ______ _____ ________ ___________.


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