**** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE **** **** ROTATE ****

Find this Story

Print, a form you can hold

Wireless download to your Amazon Kindle

Look for a summary or analysis of this Story.

Enjoy this? Share it!

PAGE 5

Observations On The Tragedy Of Macbeth
by [?]

Macbeth.
–Come what come may,
Time and the hour runs through the roughest day.

I suppose every reader is disgusted at the tautology in this passage, time and the hour, and will, therefore, willingly believe that Shakespeare wrote it thus,

–Come what come may,
Time! on!–the hour runs thro’ the roughest day.

Macbeth is deliberating upon the events which are to befall him; but finding no satisfaction from his own thoughts, he grows impatient of reflection, and resolves to wait the close without harassing himself with conjectures:

–Come what come may.

But, to shorten the pain of suspense, he calls upon time, in the usual style of ardent desire, to quicken his motion,

Time! on!–

He then comforts himself with the reflection that all his perplexity must have an end,

–The hour runs thro’ the roughest day.

This conjecture is supported by the passage in the letter to his lady, in which he says, They referr’d me to the coming on of time with, Hail, King that shall be.

NOTE IX.

SCENE VI.

Malcolm.
–Nothing in his life
Became him like the leaving it. He dy’d,
As one that had been studied in his death,
To throw away the dearest thing he ow’d,
As ’twere a careless trifle.

As the word ow’d affords here no sense, but such as is forced and unnatural, it cannot be doubted that it was originally written, The dearest thing he own’d; a reading which needs neither defence nor explication.

NOTE X.

King.
–There’s no art,
To find the mind’s construction in the face:

The construction of the mind is, I believe, a phrase peculiar to Shakespeare; it implies the frame or disposition of the mind, by which it is determined to good or ill.

NOTE XI.

Macbeth.

The service and the loyalty I owe,
In doing it, pays itself. Your highness’ part
Is to receive our duties; and our duties
Are to your throne and state, children and servants;
Which do but what they should, by doing every thing
Safe tow’rd your love and honour
.

Of the last line of this speech, which is certainly, as it is now read, unintelligible, an emendation has been attempted, which Dr. Warburton and Mr. Theobald have admitted as the true reading:
–our duties
Are to your throne and state, children and servants,
Which do but what they should, in doing every thing
Fiefs to your love and honour.

My esteem for these criticks, inclines me to believe, that they cannot be much pleased with the expressions, Fiefs to love, or Fiefs to honour; and that they have proposed this alteration, rather because no other occurred to them, than because they approved it. I shall, therefore, propose a bolder change, perhaps, with no better success, but “sua cuique placent.” I read thus,

–our duties
Are to your throne and state, children and servants,
Which do but what they should, in doing nothing,
Save
tow’rd your love and honour.

We do but perform our duty, when we contract all our views to your service, when we act with no other principle than regard to your love and honour.

It is probable that this passage was first corrupted by writing safe for save, and the lines then stood thus:

–doing nothing
Safe tow’rd your love and honour.

Which the next transcriber observing to be wrong, and yet not being able to discover the real fault, altered to the present reading.

NOTE XII.

SCENE VII.
–Thou’dst have, great Glamis,
That which cries, “thus thou must do, if thou have it;
And that,” etc.

As the object of Macbeth’s desire is here introduced speaking of itself, it is necessary to read,