"I see thee yet, in form as palpable / As this which now I draw."
Shakespeare uses the repetition of "I see" throughout the early part of the soliloquy, creating a rhetorical buildup of tension as Shakespeare creates a little more detail each time, then returns with "I see thee still" or "I see thee yet" as a refrain. Palpable denotes "capable of being touched or handled," with a possible secondary meaning of "easily perceived" in this context. Shakespeare has written stage direction into the line 'As this which now I draw' denoting that Macbeth draws his dagger.
Shakespeare uses the repetition of "I see" throughout the early part of the soliloquy, creating a rhetorical buildup of tension as Shakespeare creates a little more detail each time, then returns with "I see thee still" or "I see thee yet" as a refrain. Palpable denotes "capable of being touched or handled," with a possible secondary meaning of "easily perceived" in this context. Shakespeare has written stage direction into the line 'As this which now I draw' denoting that Macbeth draws his dagger.