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Third Murderer
Third Murderer
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Third Murderer
Macbeth character
Illustration of the three murderers from the 1830 French book Galerie de Shakspeare
Created byWilliam Shakespeare
In-universe information
AffiliationFirst Murderer, Second Murderer, Macbeth

The Third Murderer is a character in William Shakespeare's tragedy Macbeth (1606). He appears in one scene (3.3), joining the First and Second Murderers to assassinate Banquo and Fleance, at the orders of Macbeth.

The Third Murderer is not present when Macbeth speaks to the First and Second Murderers, and is not expected by his partners. Although the Third Murderer is a small role, the identity of the character has been the subject of scholarly debate, and various productions have equated him with other characters.

Role in the play

[edit]
Macbeth recruiting the first two murderers, in a 1936 Harlem production of the play

The first two murderers are recruited by Macbeth in 3.1. In 3.3, the Three Murderers meet in a park outside of the palace, and the first two do not know the Third:[1]

First Murderer. But who did bid thee join with us?
Third Murderer. Macbeth.
Second Murderer. He needs not our mistrust, since he delivers
Our offices and what we have to do
To the direction just.

The Third Murderer knows Banquo typically walks from the palace gate at this time. After the murder of Banquo, the Third Murderer asks "Who did strike out the light?" and concludes Fleance has escaped: "There's but one down; the son is fled". Altogether, the Third Murderer has six lines, almost all very brief,[2] with the only long one showing "a suspicious familiarity with Banquo's habits".[3]

Analysis

[edit]

Much of the discussion of the Third Murderer has centred on the character's identity, although the character may only be an extra.[4] In 1929, Professor Theodore Halbert Wilson said that the question of the character's identity always provoked interested debate among his students.[5]

In 1869, author Allan Park Paton argued that Macbeth was the Third Murderer. The killings of Banquo and Fleance were important to Macbeth and, while the banquet that night was scheduled to start at 7pm, Macbeth did not appear until midnight. Paton believes the Third Murderer extinguished a light to avoid recognition, and later, Macbeth tells Banquo's ghost something that sounds like "In yon black struggle you could never know me".[1] (The line is actually "Thou canst not say I did it. Never shake thy gory locks at me").[6]

Paton's theories attracted attention, with Erato Hills of the University of Cambridge calling it "very ingenious", but not supported by the play. Hills interpreted the play as portraying Macbeth, Lady Macbeth and all guests as arriving at the banquet at the same time, rather than Macbeth being late, and the mention of 7pm can be attributed to Shakespeare's lack of attention to detail. Hills also believed the First Murderer was the one who extinguished the light.[7] John Addis complimented Paton for the "quite original suggestion", citing the belief Macbeth sent the Third Murderer out of "superabundant caution", and acknowledging Macbeth could have sent himself owing to that caution.[8] Addis instead connected the Third Murderer to the spy mentioned by Macbeth in 3.1.[9] Scholar Henry Norman Hudson attempted to refute speculation that Macbeth was the Third Murderer.[10] George Walton Williams felt the law of reentry disproved the theory as this would require Macbeth to violate the law twice.[11]

The scene in which the First Murderer describes the killing of Banquo to Macbeth has been used for and against arguments of Macbeth's identity as the Third Murderer. Macbeth appears surprised Fleance has escaped, though the surprise may be feigned.[12]

Suggestions that the Third Murderer was the Thane of Ross were dismissed by Bertha D. Vives in 1933 for lack of evidence.[10] Another proposed solution is that the character is a non-human personification of a concept such as Destiny.[4]

Portrayals

[edit]

James Thurber published a humorous story "The Macbeth Murder Mystery" in The New Yorker in 1937, in which the narrator attempts to solve a whodunit claim that Macduff was the Third Murderer.[13] In Marvin Kaye's 1976 book Bullets for Macbeth, a stage director dies without telling anyone which character is the Third Murderer in his production, and detectives attempt to solve the mystery.[13]

In Roman Polanski's 1971 film version of Macbeth, the Third Murderer is Ross, played by John Stride. The added importance the film gives to Ross did not appear in the first draft of the screenplay, which instead invented a new character called the Bodyguard, who also serves as the Third Murderer.[14] The Bodyguard was merged into Shakespeare's Ross.[15]

Jack Gold's 1983 television version in BBC Television Shakespeare portrays Macbeth's servant Seyton, played by Eamon Boland, as the Third Murderer. In the television film, Seyton kills the other two murderers after the killing of Banquo, and then leads the murder of Lady Macduff, and is thus seen as "thoroughly vicious".[16]

In Joel Coen's 2021 film The Tragedy of Macbeth, as in the 1971 film, the role of Ross is expanded and merged with the Third Murderer.[17]

References

[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Third Murderer is an enigmatic minor character in William Shakespeare's tragedy (c. 1606), who unexpectedly joins the First and Second Murderers—hired by to assassinate and his son —in Act 3, Scene 3, contributing to the failed plot by identifying Banquo, inquiring about the extinguishing of their torch, and noting the escape of Fleance, though Banquo is slain and Fleance survives. This character's abrupt appearance has puzzled scholars and audiences since the play's inception, as Macbeth explicitly commissions only two assassins in Act 3, Scene 1, prompting questions about the Third Murderer's origins and motives. In the scene, the First Murderer briefly interrogates the newcomer, who demonstrates precise knowledge of the plan, the location near the palace, and Banquo's habits, before participating decisively in the violence. Numerous theories have emerged regarding the Third Murderer's identity, reflecting the character's role in deepening Macbeth's themes of , , and moral descent. One prominent interpretation, proposed by Allan Park Paton in 1869, posits that Macbeth himself disguises as the Third Murderer to oversee the personally, citing Macbeth's unexplained four-to-five-hour absence before the , his intimate familiarity with the details upon arrival, and the excessive twenty wounds inflicted on Banquo's body—suggesting hands-on involvement that heightens the protagonist's tragic degradation. Alternative Victorian-era speculations include the of Ross, as argued by M.F. Libby in 1893, linking the character to broader conspiratorial elements in the plot, or an unnamed attendant dispatched by Macbeth, as staged by in 1877 to emphasize loyalty and control. These debates, originating in 19th-century scholarly journals like , highlight how the Third Murderer's has fueled creative interpretations in , adaptations, and popular , evolving from theater to widespread cultural .

Role in the Play

Appearance in Act 3, Scene 3

In Act 3, Scene 3 of Macbeth, the scene unfolds in a park near the palace, where the First and Second Murderers, previously hired by Macbeth to assassinate Banquo and his son Fleance, lie in wait as dusk approaches. The two murderers have been instructed by Macbeth to carry out the deed to eliminate Banquo as a perceived threat to his throne, setting the stage for an ambush as Banquo makes his way to the palace for a banquet. The Third Murderer enters alongside the other two, as indicated by the stage direction "Enter three Murderers," immediately introducing an element of surprise through the ensuing dialogue that reveals his unexpected arrival to join the plot. The First Murderer, wary of the newcomer, demands to know his authorization: "But who did bid thee join with us?" The Third Murderer responds succinctly, "Macbeth," asserting that he has been dispatched directly by the king to assist in the assassination. The Second Murderer intervenes to vouch for the Third's legitimacy, noting that no further suspicion is needed because the newcomer accurately describes "our offices and what we have to do / To the direction just," demonstrating his knowledge of the precise instructions from . This exchange underscores the Third Murderer's sudden integration into the group, as the First Murderer relents with "Then stand with us," and they prepare for Banquo's approach, with the Third actively participating by alerting them to the sound of approaching horses. The murderers' acceptance highlights the scene's tension, as the anonymous addition shifts the dynamics just before the targets arrive.

Actions During the Murder of Banquo

In Act 3, Scene 3 of Macbeth, the Third Murderer participates actively in the assassination attempt on Banquo and his son Fleance in a dark park near the palace. Upon hearing horses approaching and observing the torchlight carried by Banquo and Fleance, the Third Murderer identifies the targets by declaring "'Tis he," prompting the first murderer to command "Stand to't," which initiates the sudden assault on the pair. The three murderers attack swiftly in the ensuing chaos, using daggers to stab , who cries out "O, treachery! Fly, good , fly, fly, fly!" before dying, while drops the torch and flees into the darkness. During the struggle, someone extinguishes the light to heighten the confusion, leading the Third Murderer to exclaim "Who did strike out the light?"—a line that underscores the disorientation amid the violence and the tactical decision to plunge the scene into total darkness. The first murderer responds affirmatively, confirming it as part of their plan. Following Banquo's death, the Third Murderer pursues the escaping but fails to apprehend him, later observing "There's but one down; the son is fled" to the partial of their mission. As the remaining two murderers briefly discuss the implications of losing Fleance—"We have lost best half of our affair"—the Third Murderer remains silent, abruptly departing the scene with them to relay the outcome to , offering no further explanation for his role or exit in the text.

Theories of Identity

Macbeth as the Third Murderer

The theory that Macbeth himself is the Third Murderer in Act 3, Scene 3 of Shakespeare's Macbeth was first proposed in the 19th century by Scottish scholar Allan Park Paton in a 1869 article in Notes and Queries, where he outlined eight points of evidence drawing from the play's textual inconsistencies and character psychology. Paton expanded this idea in his 1877 edition of the play, arguing that the anomaly of a third killer—unmentioned in Macbeth's earlier recruitment of only two assassins—points to the king's personal intervention due to his escalating paranoia and need for direct control over threats to his throne. Textual support for this interpretation centers on discrepancies in the scene's staging and dialogue. In Act 3, Scene 1, Macbeth explicitly addresses "both" murderers, indicating he hired only two, yet three appear in Scene 3, with the First Murderer questioning the intruder's identity: "But who did bid thee join with us?" The Third Murderer's authoritative actions—identifying and in the dark, extinguishing the torch to ensure surprise, and delivering twenty "trenched" gashes to —demonstrate an intimate knowledge of the victims and locale that aligns with Macbeth's position as host at the nearby palace, rather than a hired outsider. Furthermore, Macbeth's unexplained four-to-five-hour absence before the , coupled with his feigned surprise at Fleance's escape despite the Third Murderer's apparent pursuit, suggests he was present to oversee the deed firsthand. Macbeth's motivations for embodying the Third Murderer stem from his profound distrust of subordinates and his psychological isolation, as he confides earlier that he must "vent" his suspicions alone without involving . Having orchestrated Duncan's murder personally before delegating later killings, Macbeth's arc shows a regression to hands-on villainy to eliminate "loose ends," particularly after learning from the witches that Banquo's lineage threatens his legacy; direct participation allows him to confirm Banquo's death and pursue , assuaging his anxiety amid growing tyranny. This involvement underscores his character descent, as he risks exposure to witness the act, reflecting a compulsion to control fate amid prophetic dread. The implications of as the Third Murderer reinforce the play's exploration of self-inflicted doom and tyrannical isolation, intensifying the tragedy by portraying the king not as a distant but as an active participant whose guilt manifests immediately in the banquet scene's of Banquo's . This reading heightens thematic irony, as 's bid for security through murder only accelerates his moral and psychological unraveling, transforming the scene from mere to a pivotal marker of his villainous evolution. Later scholars, such as J. M. Nosworthy, have reformulated Paton's arguments to emphasize how this identity amplifies Shakespeare's critique of unchecked ambition leading to personal destruction.

Ross as the Third Murderer

The theory identifying Ross, a Scottish with shifting allegiances, as the Third Murderer in originated in late-19th-century , notably in M. F. Libby's analysis, which posits Ross as not only the third assailant but the orchestrator of multiple murders due to his courtly access and opportunistic role in the play's political machinations. This interpretation gained traction in 20th-century stage and film productions, emphasizing Ross's ambiguous loyalties as he navigates between Macbeth's regime and the forces of Malcolm and Macduff. Textual evidence supporting Ross's candidacy draws from his frequent proximity to the royal court and intimate knowledge of events, as seen in his early report to Duncan on the Thane of Cawdor's (Act 1, Scene 2) and his later delivery of ominous news to the Old Man about Duncan's murder (Act 2, Scene 4). The Third Murderer's refined speech—demonstrating familiarity with the palace grounds, such as noting Banquo's customary route "almost a mile" from the gate (Act 3, Scene 3)—aligns with Ross's status as a nobleman, contrasting the coarser of the first two murderers and suggesting an insider's involvement rather than a common hireling. Furthermore, Ross's prompt report to after the banquet scene (Act 3, Scene 4), where he inquires about Banquo's absence without revealing prior knowledge, implies possible in concealing the murder's failure. In staging traditions, casting Ross as the Third Murderer heightens dramatic irony, portraying him as a betrayer who feigns neutrality amid noble intrigue; this approach underscores themes of political duplicity, as Ross ultimately defects to Macduff's side and withholds of his family's slaughter until the last moment (Act 4, Scene 3). The interpretation was notably popularized in Roman Polanski's 1971 film adaptation, co-scripted with , where Ross (played by ) executes the ambush to sabotage the plot and ensure Fleance's escape, a choice echoed in Joel Coen's 2021 The Tragedy of Macbeth to amplify the noble's treachery. Critics of the theory argue it lacks direct textual confirmation, relying on circumstantial inferences that may overcomplicate Shakespeare's ambiguous design, and it overlooks the Third Murderer's apparent unawareness of the full plan upon arrival, which does not neatly fit Ross's informed position. Despite these objections, the Ross endures in interpretations that prioritize the play's exploration of among the Scottish , framing the as an act of internal rather than mere hired .

Analysis

Dramatic and Thematic Function

The appearance of the Third Murderer in Act 3, Scene 3 introduces an element of unpredictability into the assassination of Banquo, ensuring the king's death while allowing Fleance to escape, which partially thwarts Macbeth's attempt to eliminate the prophecy concerning Banquo's lineage. This outcome underscores Macbeth's growing ambivalence toward his own schemes, as the partial failure complicates the fulfillment of the witches' ambiguous predictions and propels the plot toward further conflict. By complicating the murder's success, the Third Murderer heightens the dramatic irony inherent in Macbeth's reliance on hired agents, whose actions he can no longer fully command. The enigmatic figure of the Third Murderer amplifies tension through his sudden intervention, mirroring Macbeth's erosion of control over the forces he has unleashed and echoing the witches' equivocal prophecies that promise both security and ruin. His unexplained knowledge of Banquo's approach and the ensuing chaos—marked by Banquo's cry of "O treachery!"—creates for the audience, who anticipate the scene's revelations of guilt without immediate resolution. This irony is compounded by the Third Murderer's role in displacing direct responsibility, allowing Macbeth to maintain a veneer of detachment from the while blurring the lines between principal and agent in his tyrannical . Thematically, the Third Murderer symbolizes the proliferation of evil in the play, transforming the pair of hired killers into a trio that parallels the Weird Sisters, thereby reinforcing motifs of influence and moral contagion. This unholy evokes the witches' ritualistic gatherings, such as their of "Thrice to thine, and thrice to mine, / And thrice again, to make up nine," illustrating how Macbeth's initial sins spawn an escalating cycle of depravity. In the context of tyranny, the figure embodies the diffusion of agency, where Macbeth's commands foster a web of that erodes personal accountability and perpetuates chaos. The Third Murderer's abrupt departure after the accelerates the scene's pacing, infusing it with disarray that transitions seamlessly into Macbeth's psychological torment at the , where the ghost's appearance manifests unresolved guilt. This structural choice intensifies the play's frenetic rhythm, emphasizing the uncontrollable repercussions of ambition without providing cathartic closure, and underscoring the thematic inevitability of evil's self-perpetuation.

Textual Anomalies and Scholarly Debates

The 1623 First Folio text of Macbeth presents a notable inconsistency regarding the assassins hired to murder Banquo: in Act 3, Scene 1, Macbeth explicitly recruits only two men, addressing them as "both" and outlining their task without reference to a third party (3.1.76–114). Yet in Act 3, Scene 3, three murderers enter the stage, with the third arriving unannounced and claiming to have been sent by Macbeth, prompting surprise from the first two ("But who did bid thee join with us? / Macbeth" [3.3.1–2]). This abrupt introduction lacks any preparatory dialogue or stage direction in the Folio, the sole early printed source for the play, as no quarto edition exists for comparison. Scholars have theorized that the Third Murderer represents a later revision to the script, potentially added by Shakespeare after initial performances to amplify dramatic tension in the assassination sequence. Alternative proposals attribute textual anomalies in Macbeth to collaborative revisions, as seen in interpolated elements like the Hecate scenes, possibly involving contemporaries such as Thomas Middleton. Modern editorial treatments, including the edition by Kenneth Muir (1951), grapple with whether this discrepancy stems from a compositor's during , deliberate authorial , or an unfinished revision left intact. The New Cambridge Shakespeare, edited by A. R. Braunmuller (), notes the absence of explanatory context as a key puzzle, debating if it signals textual corruption or serves as a "perfect spy o' th' time" (3.1.129) to underscore 's , while emphasizing the lack of evidence precludes definitive resolution. Scholarly interpretations of the anomaly have evolved significantly over time. Eighteenth-century editors often viewed such inconsistencies as structural flaws or oversights, sometimes proposing emendations. By the twentieth century, however, critics increasingly valued it as intentional ambiguity, interpreting the figure as a sophisticated device that mirrors the play's themes of deception and unreliability, thereby enriching debates on Shakespeare's experimental approach to authorship and potential collaborations. These discussions continue into the twenty-first century, with recent analyses exploring the character's implications for themes of political witnessing and identity, such as speculations linking the Third Murderer to Ross in contemporary .

Portrayals

Stage Interpretations

In early modern performances of Macbeth, the Third Murderer was likely portrayed by a supernumerary actor, serving primarily to inject unexpected tension into the otherwise straightforward assassination of Banquo and Fleance, as part of a broader Renaissance dramatic convention where additional assassins heightened suspense and moral ambiguity in murder scenes. During the , actor-manager proposed interpreting the Third Murderer as the unnamed Attendant from Act 3, Scene 1, leveraging the character's familiarity with the hired killers' dialogue to emphasize Macbeth's paranoia and the operation's coordinated menace, a choice that influenced subsequent stagings by adding layers of intrigue to the role. In the , ' 1936 Voodoo Macbeth integrated the Third Murderer into its Haitian-inspired supernatural framework, with the character doubled by an actor (such as Jack Carter in a multifaceted role) to underscore themes of and political conspiracy, portraying the assassins as extensions of otherworldly forces rather than mere thugs. Modern productions often employ doubling for ironic effect, such as casting the actor playing Ross as the Third Murderer in politically themed interpretations to subtly evoke scholarly debates on identity and , while directorial choices like stark and shadows render the figure spectral, amplifying the play's atmosphere of dread and ambiguity. For instance, in the Royal Shakespeare Company's production directed by Polly Findlay, Michael Hodgson doubled the role with the Porter and Seyton, using casual physicality—like munching crisps amid the ambush—to blend with underlying menace, highlighting class disparities among the killers through contrasting and props.

Film and Television Adaptations

In Orson Welles's 1948 of , the Third Murderer appears as a shadowy, uncredited figure amid the production's expressionistic fog and low-budget noir aesthetics, contributing to the scene's atmospheric tension during Banquo's ambush in a misty castle courtyard. The murder sequence emphasizes visual obscurity and dread, with the killers emerging from darkness to strike, aligning with Welles's stylistic choice to heighten the play's supernatural paranoia through lighting and minimal . Roman Polanski's 1971 cinematic version casts Ross, played by John Stride, explicitly as the Third Murderer, transforming him into a complicit insider who joins the assassins in a brutal, rain-soaked woodland attack on Banquo and Fleance. This portrayal amplifies the violence with graphic depictions, including close-up stabbings and the killers' subsequent drowning by Ross for their failure, underscoring themes of betrayal and political intrigue through raw, unflinching realism influenced by Polanski's personal tragedies. The BBC Television Shakespeare's 1983 production, directed by Jack Gold, identifies Macbeth's servant Seyton (Eamon Boland) as the Third Murderer, using tight close-ups during the ambush to build suspicion and reveal his authoritative intervention among the hired killers. This choice integrates Seyton into multiple violent acts, employing studio-bound sets and deliberate pacing to emphasize his role in Macbeth's escalating tyranny without overt supernatural elements. In Rupert Goold's 2010 PBS Great Performances adaptation, featuring Patrick Stewart as Macbeth, Lennox serves as the Third Murderer, depicted in a mid-20th-century wartime bunker setting where he executes Banquo with cold efficiency during a tense, enclosed pursuit. The scene's psychological depth arises from Lennox's dual loyalty and the production's use of dim lighting and echoing sounds to suggest Macbeth's intrusive paranoia, portraying the killer as an extension of the protagonist's fractured psyche. Justin Kurzel's 2015 film, starring , presents the Third Murderer (doubling as a messenger) as an anonymous enforcer in a visceral forest chase sequence that intensifies the with dynamic handheld camerawork and prolonged shadows. This adaptation heightens the action's primal urgency, focusing on the killers' frantic pursuit through mud and trees to capture Fleance's escape, thereby amplifying the thematic weight of inevitable downfall amid Scotland's harsh landscapes. Joel Coen's 2021 black-and-white The Tragedy of Macbeth, available on streaming platforms, assigns the role to Ross (Alex Hassell), who arrives on horseback to aid the assassins in a stark, geometrically framed nighttime killing that spares for narrative ambiguity. The sequence employs minimalist sets and high-contrast visuals to evoke isolation, with Ross's intervention highlighting cycles of deception through subtle gestures rather than explicit violence. Across these adaptations, the Third Murderer is frequently amplified for cinematic horror—via supernatural-tinged makeup in Welles's foggy apparitions or Polanski's blood-drenched realism—while some versions excise or streamline the role for tighter pacing, contrasting the intimate ambiguity of stage portrayals by leveraging and editing to externalize internal dread. Recent works, including Kurzel's and Coen's, explore diverse casting and in supporting roles, though the Third Murderer remains predominantly male and enigmatic to preserve textual mystery.

References

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