Task V: Or do the eyes fool the
                   other senses?
Repeat Task IV, instead this time, close your eyes and just listen.  Count the number of times you hear references to sight, seeing, vision etc..  Also count the number of times you hear the word "witch."
***"Is this a dagger which I see before me . . ."**
Was your count any different this time?  Six occurences different?   Had you pulled a Van Gogh and lop an ear off while reading the first time?   When listening, all the printed "which"es turn into "witches."  Macbeth's speeches are riddled with punning "whiches" up until 2.2 when he kills Duncan.  They then dramatically drop off.  

Explain in one to two pages what crucial reminder about Shakespeare's plays this give us?  How is such a move consistent with what we know about the witches?  What defines their speech?  Lastly, what does this tell us about language?   
Intro ……………………………...***NOT Family Entertainment**
Task I …………………………......***Our Beginning and End**
Task II …………………………............***The Body Politic**
Task III ………………………......***Phil Collins is Macbeth**
Task IV …………………..*** “Mine eyes are made the fools”**
Task V ……………………...*** Or, are the eyes make the . . .**
  
          
***Macbeth Homepage**