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So clear in his great office, that his virtues
Will plead, like angels, trumpet-tongu'd against
The deep damnation of his taking off:
And pity, like a naked new-born babe,
Striding the blaft, or heav'ns cherubin hors'd
Upon the fightless courfers of the air,
Shall blow the horrid deed in ev'ry eye;
That tears shall drown the wind

I have no fpur
To prick the fides of my intent, but only
Vaulting ambition, which o'erleaps itfelf,
And falls on th'other.

SCENE X. True Fortitude.

(6) I dare do all that may become a man, Who dares do more, is none.

ACT II.

The murdering Scene.

SCENE II.

Macbeth alone.

Is this a dagger which I fee before me,

The handle tow'rd my hand? come let me clutch thee,
I have thee not, and yet I see thee still.
Art thou not, fatal vifion, fenfible
To feeling, as to fight? or art thou but

(6) Idare, &c. The whole prefent scene well deferves a place here, however I fhall only beg leave to refer the reader to it. "The arguments, fays fobnfon, by which lady Macbeth perfuades her hufband to commit the murder, afford a proof of Shakespear's knowledge of human nature. She urges the excellence and dignity of courage, a glittering idea, which has dazzled mankind from age to age, and animated fometimes the house-breaker, and fometimes the conqueror: but this fophifm Macbeth has forever deftroyed, by diftinguishing true from falfe fortitude, in a line and a half, of which it may almost be faid, that they ought to bestow immortality on the author, though his other productions had been loft," &c. See his 16th note:

-

A dag

A dagger of the mind, a falfe creation
Proceeding from the heat-oppreffed brain?
I fee thee yet, in form as palpable
As this which now I draw

Thou marshal'it me the way that I was going?
And fuch an inftrument I was to use.

Mine eyes are made the fools o' th' other senses,
Or elfe worth all the reft- I fee thee ftill;

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And on thy blade and dudgeon, * gouts of blood,
Which was not fo before.-There's no fuch thing-
It is the bloody bufinefs, which informs

Thus to mine eyes. (7) Now o'er one half the world
Nature feems dead, and wicked dreams abufe
The curtain'd fleep; now witchcraft celebrates
Pale Hecate's offerings: and wither'd murder,
(Alarum'd by his centinel, the wolf,

Whose howl's his watch) thus with his stealthy pace,

#Gouts, i. e. drops.

(7) Now o'er, &c.] That is, over our hemisphere all action and motion fem to have ceased. This image, which is, perhaps, the most striking that poetry can produce, has been adopted by Dryden, in his Conqueft of Mexico.

All things are hufh'd as nature's felf lay dead,
The mountains feem to nod their drowsy head:
The little birds in dreams their fongs repeat,

And fleeping flow`rs beneath the night-dews fweat:
Even luft and envy sleep!

:

Thefe lines, though fo well known, I have tranfcribed, that the contraft between them and this paffage of Shakespear, may be more accurately obferved.-Night is defcribed by two great poets, but one defcribes a night of quiet, the other of percubation: In the night of Dryden, all the difturbers of the world are laid asleep in that of Shakespear, nothing but forcery, luft, and murder is awake. He that reads Dryden, finds himself lull'd with ferenity, and difpos'd to folitude and contemplation: he that perufes Shakespear, looks round alarmed, and ftarts to find himself alone, One is the night of a lover, the other that of a murderer. JOHNSON.

(8) With Tarquin's ravishing ftrides, tow'rds his defign Moves like a ghost.. -(9) Thou found and firm-set earth,

Hear not my steps, which way they walk, for fear
Thy very ftones prate of my whereabout;

And take the present horror from the time,

Which now fuits with it—whilft I threat, he lives

I
go,
and it is done; the bell invites me.
Hear it not, Duncan, for it is a knell

[A bell rings.

That fummons thee to heaven, or to hell.

[Exit.

(8) With, &c.] The reading in the old books is, With Tarquin's ravishing sides towards, &c. Which Mr. Pope alter'd to that in the text. Mr. Jobnfon is for reading,

With Tarquin ravishing, flides tow'rd, &c.

Because a ravishing fride is an action of violence, impetuofity, and tumult; and because the progreffion of ghofts is fo different from frides, that it has been in all ages reprefented to be as Milton expreffes it,

Smooth fliding without ftep.

It seems to me, the poet only speaks of the filence, and fecrecy wherewith the ghofts were fuppofed to move; and, as when people walk with a stealthy pace, or as it is called on tip-toe, they generally take long frides, not ftepping frequently, I fhould judge Jirides to be the proper reading; befide, I think the two verbs coming in that manner together not entirely elegant ; flides towards his design, and moves like a ghoft, seem too near a tautology. I am the more explicit in this paffage, as any remark of fo ingenious a person deserves all attention. We may obferve, Shakespear, in his poem of Tarquin and Lucrece, fays of Tarquin entring the lady's chamber.

Into the chamber wickedly he talks.

(9) Thou, &c.] Hear not, O earth, my fteps, left thy very ftones fhould prate, fhould tell of where I am, and what I am about to perpetrate, and by their prating, or making a noife, take away that filence, the prefent horror, from the time, which fo well fuits with it." For what could be more dreadful to fuch a mind as Macbeth's, than fo univerfal a filence, when all nature deeply hush'd, muft feem to his guilty mind, as liftening to his purpose, and attending to the act he was about to perform ?

Enter

Enter Lady.

Lady. That which hath made them drunk, hath made me bold :

What hath quench'd them, hath giv'n me fire. Hark! peace!

It was the owl that shriek'd, the fatal bell-man,
Which gives the ftern'ft good night—he is about it-
The doors are open; and the furfeited grooms
Do mock their charge with fnores. I've drugg'd their
poffets,

That death and nature do contend about them.
Whether they live or die.

Enter Macbeth.

Mach. Who's there? what ho?

Lady. Alack! I am afraid, they have awak'd ; And 'tis not done; th' attempt and not the deed, Confounds us-hark !I laid their daggers ready, He could not mifs 'em- -Had he not resembled

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My father as he flept, I had don't-My husband! Mach. I've done the deed didft thou not hear

a noife?

Lady. I heard the owl fcream, and the crickets cry. Did not you speak?

Mach. When?

Lady. Now.

Macb. As I defcended?

Lady. Ay.

Macb. Hark-who lies i'th' fecond chamber?

Lady. Donalbain.

Matb. This is a forry fight.

[Looks on his hands.

Lady. A foolish thought, to fay, a forry fight.

Macb. There's one did laugh in's fleep, and one

cry'd murder!

They wak'd each other; and I ftood and heard them;

But

But they did fay their prayers, and addrefs them

Again to fleep.

Lady. There are two lodg'd together.

Macb, One cry'd, God bless us ! and Amen, the
other;

As they had seen me with thefe hangman's hands.
Listening their fear, I could not say, Amen,
When they did fay, God blefs us!

Lady Confider it not fo deeply.

Macb. But wherefore could not I pronounce Amen? I had most need of bleffing, and Amen

Stuck in my throat.

Lady. Thefe deeds must not be thought, After these ways; fo, it will make us mad.

Macb. Methought, I heard a voice cry, fleep no

more!

Macbeth doth murder fleep; the innocent sleep;
Sleep, that knits up the raveil'd sleeve of care,
(10) The death of each day's life, fore labour's bath,
Balm of hurt minds, great nature's fecond courfe,
Chief nourisher in life's feaft.

Lady. What do you mean?

Mach. Still it cry'd, fleep no more, to all the houfe; Glamis hath murder'd fleep, and therefore Cawdor Shall fleep no more; Macbeth shall sleep no more! Lady. Who was it, that thus cry'd ? why (11) worthy Thane,

You do unbend your noble ftrength, to think

(10) The Death, &c.] Shakespear frequently fpeaks of fleep as the image of death: at the end of the 4th Scene in this Act, Macduff calls it death's counterfeit fleep that knits up the ravell'd fleeve of care-alludes to fleav'd filk ravell'd.

(11) Why, &c.] Should not this be read,

Why, worthy Thane,

Do you enbend your noble ftrength?

The interrogation feems not only neceffary, but beautiful.

So

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