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Please help... for coursework...
Was it a lord... if it was does he have a name?
LoL

2007-02-28 05:01:03 · 5 answers · asked by Anonymous in Education & Reference Quotations

OMG, JUST SHUT UP IF YOU DONT GET ME...
In the play Macbeth who says "the tables full" in the banquetting scene... God not hard to understand!

2007-02-28 05:07:51 · update #1

5 answers

Macbeth says it as he is the only one to see the ghost of Banquo at the table ( lady macbeth tells him to sit down and stop making such a noise as it will cast suspicion on them for the murder of Duncan) - everyone else sees the empty seat so do not understand why he is saying ' Do not shake those gory locks at me' - they only see the empty seat.

2007-02-28 05:14:21 · answer #1 · answered by K R 2 · 0 0

Macbeth says that in Act 3.

2007-02-28 13:09:30 · answer #2 · answered by robinlovescmt 1 · 0 0

Act 3, scene 4. Macbeth is standing around talking, and a lord named Lennox says, "May it please your highness sit?" But Macbeth still stands there talking. So another lord named Ross says, "Please it your highness to grace us with your company?" So Macbeth says, "The table's full". Lennox says, "Here's a place reserved, sir", pointing to an empty chair. But Macbeth looks at that chair, and to him it doesn't look empty. He sees Banquo's ghost sitting there. Nobody else sees it, so they can't figure out why Macbeth is going berserk and refusing to sit down.

2007-02-28 17:00:05 · answer #3 · answered by Maria E. 3 · 0 0

Lol HiBeck ImNot Answerin Your Q Im Just Gettin Points Lolz!

2007-02-28 13:56:14 · answer #4 · answered by [E]mpti-[N]ess 1 · 0 0

lol..what are you talking about?

2007-02-28 13:06:08 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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