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P. 125.

Firedrake, Puckey, make it lucky;
Liard, Robin, you must bob in.
Round, around, around, about, about!
All ill come running in, all good keep out!

Though the treasure

Of Nature's germens tumble all together, &c. - - The original has "Natures Germaine." But the plural is evidently required; and we have the same spelling of germens in King Lear, iii. 2: "Cracke Natures moulds, all germaines spill at once that makes ingratefull Man.”

P. 127. Rebellion's head rise never, till the wood

Of Birnam rise, &c. - So Hanmer and Collier's second folio. The original has "Rebellious dead, rise never," &c.

P. 128. Thy crown does sear mine eyeballs: — and thy air, Thou other gold-bound brow, is like the first. — The original has hair instead of air. The correction is Johnson's. The Poet elsewhere uses air for look or appearance. A family likeness is evidently the thing meant; and hair is not general enough for that. See foot-note 16.

P. 129. Horrible sight! - Nay, now I see 'tis true;

For the blood-bolter'd Banquo, &c. - - So Pope. The orig

inal is without Nay. Steevens inserted Ay.

P. 130. This deed I'll do before this purpose cool:

But no more sights! This accords with Macbeth's exclamation, a little before, at the vision of Banquo and his descendants: "Horrible sight!" Notwithstanding, much fault has been found with sights. Collier's second folio changes it to flights, referring to the flight of Macduff. White substitutes sprites. Both changes, it seems to me, impair the poetry without bettering the sense; and sprites is particularly unhappy.

P. 131. But cruel are the times, when we are traitors,

And do not know't ourselves. So Hanmer and Collier's second folio. The original has "not know ourselves."

P. 131. But float upon a wild and violent sea

Each way it moves. - So Mr. P. A. Daniel. The original has "Each way, and move"; out of which it is not easy to make any thing. Theobald printed "Each way and wave," and Steevens conjectured "And each way move"; but surely Daniel's reading is much the best.

P. 134.

Wherefore should I fly?

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I've done no harm. - Instead of Wherefore, the old text has Whither, which does not suit the context at all. Lettsom proposes Why.

P. 134. Thou liest, thou shag-hair'd villain ! — The original has "thou shagge-ear'd Villaine." Doubtless, as Dyce notes, ear'd is “a corruption of hear'd, which is an old spelling of hair'd." And he fully substantiates this by quotations.

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P. 135. Hold fast the mortal sword; and like good men Bestride our down-fall'n birthdom. - The original has our downfall Birthdome."

P. 135.

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- The original has

I'm young; but something You may deserve of him through me. discerne instead of deserve. Corrected by Theobald.

P. 136.

Wear thou thy wrongs,

So Malone and Collier's second folio.

Thy title is affeer'd!
The original has "The Title, is affear'd."

P. 141. Whither indeed, before thy here-approach, &c.—The original has they instead of thy. Corrected in the second folio.

P. 146.

of tune.

This tune goes manly.

Come, go we to the King.—The original has time instead
Corrected by Rowe.

ACT V., SCENE I.

P. 148. Doct. You see, her eyes are open.

Gent. Ay, but their sense is shut.

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"their sense are shut." Doubtless an accidental repetition from the line above. Rowe's correction.

ACT V., SCENE II.

P. 151. He cannot buckle his distemper'd course

Within the belt of rule. So Walker and Collier's second folio. The old text has "distemper'd cause." As Macbeth is said to be acting like a madman, or going wild and crazy in his course, there need, I think, be no scruple of the correction.

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Will chair me ever, or dis-seat me now. So Percy and Collier's second folio. The original reads "Will cheere me ever, or dis-eate me now." The second folio changes dis-eate to disease. But the reading thus given seems to me very tame and unsuited to the occasion. Chair is often used for throne; and Macbeth may well think that the present assault will either confirm his tenure of the throne, or oust him from it entirely.

P. 154. I have lived long enough: my way of life

Is fall'n into the sere, the yellow leaf. - Collier's second folio has "my May of life"; and so Johnson proposed to read. This reading would imply Macbeth to be a young man, which he is not, and to be struck with premature old age, which cannot be his meaning. As Gifford says, "way of life" is "a simple periphrasis for life." Macbeth is in the autumn of life, is verging upon old age, the winter of life; for such is the meaning of "the sere, the yellow leaf"; and what he here laments so pathetically is, that his old age cannot have the comforts, honours, friendships which naturally attend it, and are needful, to make it supportable.

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Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased? - So the second folio. The first omits her.

P. 155. Cleanse the stuff'd bosom of that perilous stuff. It has been thought, as it might well be, that stuff occurs once too often in this line. Collier's second folio has "perilous grief"; which is less acceptable than "Cleanse the foul bosom," proposed by SteeThe other conjectures offered seem to me out of the question.

vens.

P. 155. What rhubarb, senna, or what purgative drug,

Would scour these English hence? - Instead of senna, the original has Cyme, which is not, and never was, the English name of any drug. The correction is from the fourth folio.

ACT V., SCENE IV.

P. 156. For, where there is advantage to be ta'en,

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So

Both more and less have given him the revolt. Walker. The original reads "advantage to be given." Collier's second folio reads "advantage to be gotten."

ACT V., SCENE V.

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P. 157. The time has been, my senses would have quail'd To hear a night-shriek. - So Collier's second folio. The original reads "my sences would have cool'd"; which, surely, is quite too tame for the occasion. In Julius Cæsar, iv., 3, we have "That makest my blood cold"; but this is very different from "makes my senses cold." Dyce remarks that "examples of the expression, senses quailing, may be found in our early writers."

P. 159. I should report that which I'd say I saw,

But know not how to do't.

Macb.

Well, say it, sir. -The original

reads "which I say I saw," and "Well, say sir." The first of these corrections is Hanmer's; the other, Pope's.

P. 159. I pall in resolution, and begin

To doubt th' equivocation of the fiend, &c. The old text has "I pull in resolution." Johnson proposed pall, which, as the Clarendon edition observes, "better expresses the required sense, involuntary loss of heart and hope." Besides, with pull, "we must emphasize in, contrary to the rhythm of the verse."

ACT V., SCENE VIII.

P. 164. And damn'd be he that first cries "Hold."- The old text has him instead of he. Corrected by Pope,

P. 164. [Exeunt, fighting. Alarums. In the original, this stage-direction is immediately followed, in the next line, by another, which is difficult to explain, and is omitted in all modern editions known to me; thus: "Enter fighting, and Macbeth slaine." Then comes the stage-direction, which modern editors retain, "Retreat, and Flourish. Enter with Drumme and Colours, Malcolm, Seyward," &c. What makes the matter still more perplexing is, that, nineteen lines further on, the original, without any intervening exit, has the stagedirection, “Enter Macduffe; with Macbeths head." The likeliest explanation seems to be, that the play originally ended with “Exeunt, fighting," and that what follows was afterwards tacked on by Middleton, in order to gratify the audience with more fighting, and with the sight of Macbeth's head on a pole. Surely it is not like Shakespeare's Macduff thus to mutilate the body of Macbeth after killing him; an act neither gentle nor brave.

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