"Mine eyes are made the fools o' the other senses, / Or else worth all the rest"
Macbeth wonders whether this "fatal vision" is coming from reality, his mind, or if it is a temptation from his evil side. Either Macbeth's sight is being fooled by his other senses or else his sight alone is the only sense to be trusted, literally "either my sight is being deceived or all my other senses are." The line 'or else worth all the rest, I see thee still' may be written as straight iambic pentameter, if the word "worth" is unstressed; however there are numerous ways of reading this line.
Macbeth wonders whether this "fatal vision" is coming from reality, his mind, or if it is a temptation from his evil side. Either Macbeth's sight is being fooled by his other senses or else his sight alone is the only sense to be trusted, literally "either my sight is being deceived or all my other senses are." The line 'or else worth all the rest, I see thee still' may be written as straight iambic pentameter, if the word "worth" is unstressed; however there are numerous ways of reading this line.