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Could trammel up the consequence, and catch,
With his surcease, success;3 that but this blow

in which judgment is pronounced and vengeance inflicted upon us bere in our present life. We teach others to do as we have done, and are punished by our own example. Johnson.

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We are told by Dryden, that "Ben Jonson, in reading some bombast speeches in Macbeth, which are not to be understood, used to say that it was borrour."-Perhaps the present passage was one of those thus depreciated Any person but this envious detractor would have dwelt with pleasure on the transcendant beauties of this sublime tragedy, which, after Othello, is perhaps our author's greatest work; and would have been more apt to have been thrown into "strong shudders" and blood-freezing agues," by its interesting and high-wrought scenes, than to have been offended by any imaginary hardness of its language; for such, it appears from the context, is what he meant by borrour. That there are difficult passages in this tragedy, cannot be denied; but that there are some bombast speeches in it, which are not to be understood," as Dryden asserts, will not very readily be granted to him. From this assertion, however, and the verbal alterations made by him and Sir W. D'Avenant, in some of our author's plays, I think it clearly appears that Dryden and the other poets of the time of Charles II, were not very deeply skilled in the language of their predecessors, and that Shakspeare was not so well understood fifty years after his death, as he is at this day. Malone.

3 Could trammel up the consequence, and catch,

With his surcease, success;] I think the reasoning requires that we should read:

With its success surcease. →→→→→→→→ Johnson.

A trammel is a net in which either birds or fishes are caught. So, in The Isle of Gulls, 1633:

“Each tree and shrub wears trammels of thy hair.” Surcease is cessation, stop. So, in The Valiant Welchman, 1615:

"Surcease brave brother. Fortune hath crown'd our brows." His is used instead of its, in many places. Steevens.

The personal pronouns are so frequently used by Shakspeare, instead of the impersonal, that no amendment would be necessary in this passage, even if it were certain that the pronoun bis refers to assassination, which seems to be the opinion of Johnson and Steevens; but I think it more probable that it refers to Duncan; and that by bis surcease Macbeth means Duncan's death, which was the object of his contemplation M. Mason.

His certainly may refer to assassination, (as Dr. Johnson, by his proposed alteration, seems to have thought it did) for Shakspeare very frequently uses bis for its. But in this place perhaps bis refers to Duncan; and the meaning may be, If the

Might be the be-all and the end-all here,

But here, upon this bank and shoal of time, 4-
We'd jump the life to come."-But, in these cases,
We still have judgment here; that we but teach
Bloody instructions, which, being taught, return
To plague the inventor: "This even-handed justice* Thus

assassination, at the same time that it puts an end to the life of Duncan, could procure me unalloyed happiness, promotion to the crown unmolested by the compunctious visitings of conscience, &c. To cease often signifies in these plays, to die. So, in All's Well that Ends Well:

"Or, ere they meet, in me, O nature, cease."

I think, however, it is more probable that bis is used for its, and that it relates to assassination. Malone.

4 shoal of time,] This is Theobald's emendation, undoubtedly right. The old edition has school, and Dr. Warburton shelve. Johnson.

By the shoal of time, our author means the shallow ford of life, between us and the abyss of eternity. Steevens.

5 We'd jump the life to come.] So, in Cymbeline, Act V, sc. iv:

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or jump the after-inquiry on your own peril. Steevens. "We 'd jump the life to come," certainly means, We 'd bazard or run the risk of what might happen in a future state of being. So, in Antony and Cleopatra:

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Our fortune lies

Upon this jump.”

Again, in Coriolanus:

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"To jump a body with a dangerous physic,
"That's sure of death without it."

See note on this passage, Act III, sc. i. Malone,

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Bloody instructions, which, being taught, return

To plague the inventor:] So, in Bellenden's translation of Hector Boethius: "He [Macbeth] was led be wod furyis, as ye nature of all tyrannis is, quhilks conquessis landis or kingdomes be wrangus titil, ay full of hevy thocht and dredour, and traisting ilk man to do siclik crueltes to bym, as he did afore to othir." Malone.

7 This even-banded justice - Mr. M. Mason observes, that we might more advantageously read

Thus even-banded justice, &c. Steevens.

The old reading I believe to be the true one, because Shakspeare has very frequently used this mode of expression. So, a little lower: "Besides, this Duncan," &c. Again, in King Henry IV, P. I:

Commends the ingredients of our poison'd chalice
To our own lips. He's here in double trust:
First, as I am his kinsman and his subject,
Strong both against the deed; then, as his host,
Who should against his murderer shut the door,
Not bear the knife myself. Besides, this Duncan
Hath borne his faculties so meek,' hath been
So clear in his great office, that his virtues
Will plead like angels, trumpet-tongued, against
The deep damnation2 of his taking-off:
And pity, like a naked new-born babe,
Striding the blast, or heaven's cherubin, hors'd
Upon the sightless couriers of the air,3

"That this same child of honour and renown,
"This gallant Hotspur, this all-praised knight."

Malone.

& Commends the ingredients-] Thus, in a subsequent scene of this play:

66

I wish your horses swift, and sure of foot, "And so I do commend you to their backs."

This verb has many shades of meaning. It seems here to signify-offers, or recommends. Steevens.

9 -our poison'd chalice

To our own lips.] Our poet, apis Matine more modoque, would stoop to borrow a sweet from any flower, however humble in its situation.

"The pricke of conscience (says Holinshed) caused him ever to feare, lest he should-be served of the same cup as he had ministered to his predecessor." - Steevens.

1 Hath borne his faculties so meek,] Faculties, for office, exercise of power, &c Warburton.

"Duncan (says Holinshed) was soft and gentle of nature.” And again: "Macbeth spoke much against the king's softness, and overmuch slackness in punishing offenders." Steevens

2 The deep, damnation -] So, in A dolfull Discourse of a Lord and a Ladie, by Churchyard, 1593:

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I should not have thought this little coincidence worth noting, had I not found it in a poem which it should seem, from other passages, that Shakspeare had read and remembered. Steevens. or heaven's cherubin, hors'd Upon the sightless couriers of the air,] Couriers of air are winds, air in motion.

3

Courier is only runner.
Sightless is invisible.
Jobuson

Shall blow the horrid deed in every eye,
That tears shall drown the wind.^—I have no spur

To prick the sides of my intent, but only

Vaulting ambition," which o'er-leaps itself," its sell i.e. seat

Again, in this play:

"Wherever in your sightless substances," &c.

Again, in Heywood's Brazen Age, 1613:

Again:

"The flames of hell and Pluto's sightless fires.

"Hath any sightless and infernal fire

"Laid hold upon my flesh?"

Again, in Warner's Albion's England, 1602, B. II, c. xi:

"The scouring winds that sightless in the sounding air
do fly."
Steevens.

So, in King Henry V:

"Borne with the invisible and creeping wind."

Again, in our author's 51st Sonnet:

"Then should I spur, though mounted on the wind."

Again, in the Prologue to King Henry IV, P. II:

"I, from the orient to the drooping west,

"Making the wind my post-horse-.'

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The thought of the cherubin (as has been somewhere observ ed) seems to have been borrowed from the eighteenth Psalm: "He rode upon the cherubins and did fly; he came flying upon the wings of the wind." Again, in the book of Job, ch. xxx, v. "Thou causest me to ride upon the wind." Malone.

22:

4 That tears shall drown the wind.] Alluding to the remission of the wind in a shower. Johnson.

So, in King Henry VI, P. III:

"For raging wind blows up incessant showers;
"And, when the rage allays, the rain begins."

Again, in our author's Venus and Adonis:

"Even as the wind is hush'd before it raineth." Steevents.

Again, in The Rape of Lucrece:

"This windy tempest, till it blow up rain

"Held back his sorrow's tide, to make it more;

"At last it rains and busy winds give o'er."

Again, in Troilus and Cressida:

5

"Where are my tears ?—rain, rain to lay this wind."

I have no spur

To prick the sides of my intent, but only

Malone,

Vaulting ambition,] The spur of the occasion is a phrase

used by lord Bacon. Steevens.

So, in the tragedy of Casar and Pompey, 1607:

"Why think you, lords, that 'tis ambition's spur,

That pricketh Cæsar to these high attempts?" Malene

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And falls on the other."-How now! what news?

Enter Lady MACBETH.

Lady M. He has almost supp'd; Why have you left the chamber?

1

Again, in The First Part of the tragicall Raigne of Selimus, &c. 4to. 1594:

"My sonnes whom now ambition ginnes to pricke. Todd. And falls on the other.] Sir T. Hanmer has on this occa sion added a word, and would read

And falls on the other side.

Yet they who plead for the admission of this supplement, should consider, that the plural of it, but two lines before had occurred.

I, also, who once attempted to justify the omission of this word, ought to have understood that Shakspeare could never mean to describe the agitation of Macbeth's mind, by the assistance of a halting verse.

The general image, though confusedly expressed, relates to a horse, who, overleaping himself, falls, and his rider under him. To complete the line we may therefore read

"And falls upon the other "

Thus, in The Taming of a Shrew: "How he left her with the horse upon her."

Macbeth, as I apprehend, is meant for the rider, his intent for his horse, and his ambition for his spur; but, unluckily, as the words are arranged, the spur is said to over-leap itself. Such hazardous things are long-drawn metaphors in the hands of careless writers. Steevens.

Enter Lady-] The arguments by which lady Macbeth persuades her husband to commit the murder, afford a proof of Shakspeare'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 sometimes the house-breaker, and sometimes the conqueror; but this sophism Macbeth has forever destroyed, by distinguishing true from false fortitude, in a line and a half; of which it may almost be said, that they ought to bestow immortality on the author, though all his other productions had been lost:

I dare do all that may become a man;

Who dares do more, is none.

This topic, which has been always employed with too much success, is used in this scene, with peculiar propriety, to a soldier by a woman. Courage is the distinguishing virtue of a soldier; and the reproach of cowardice cannot be borne by any man from a woman, without great impatience.

She then urges the oaths by which he had bound himself to murder Duncan, another art of sophistry by which men have sometimes deluded their conscience, and persuaded themselves

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