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			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: MACBETH by William Shakespeare]]></title>
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			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>MACDUFF.<br />Let our just censures<br />Attend the true event, and put we on<br />Industrious soldiership.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />The time approaches,<br />That will with due decision make us know<br />What we shall say we have, and what we owe.<br />Thoughts speculative their unsure hopes relate;<br />But certain issue strokes must arbitrate:<br />Towards which advance the war.</p><p>(Exeunt, marching.)</p><br /><p>SCENE V. Dunsinane. Within the castle.</p><p>(Enter with drum and colours, Macbeth, Seyton, and Soldiers.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Hang out our banners on the outward walls;<br />The cry is still, &quot;They come:&quot; our castle&#039;s strength<br />Will laugh a siege to scorn: here let them lie<br />Till famine and the ague eat them up:<br />Were they not forc&#039;d with those that should be ours,<br />We might have met them dareful, beard to beard,<br />And beat them backward home.</p><p>(A cry of women within.)</p><p>What is that noise?</p><p>SEYTON.<br />It is the cry of women, my good lord.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I have almost forgot the taste of fears:<br />The time has been, my senses would have cool&#039;d<br />To hear a night-shriek; and my fell of hair<br />Would at a dismal treatise rouse and stir<br />As life were in&#039;t: I have supp&#039;d full with horrors;<br />Direness, familiar to my slaught&#039;rous thoughts,<br />Cannot once start me.</p><p>(Re-enter Seyton.)</p><p>Wherefore was that cry?</p><p>SEYTON.<br />The queen, my lord, is dead.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />She should have died hereafter;<br />There would have been a time for such a word.--<br />To-morrow, and to-morrow, and to-morrow,<br />Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,<br />To the last syllable of recorded time;<br />And all our yesterdays have lighted fools<br />The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!<br />Life&#039;s but a walking shadow; a poor player,<br />That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,<br />And then is heard no more: it is a tale<br />Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,<br />Signifying nothing.</p><p>(Enter a Messenger.)</p><p>Thou com&#039;st to use thy tongue; thy story quickly.</p><p>MESSENGER.<br />Gracious my lord,<br />I should report that which I say I saw,<br />But know not how to do it.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Well, say, sir.</p><p>MESSENGER.<br />As I did stand my watch upon the hill,<br />I look&#039;d toward Birnam, and anon, methought,<br />The wood began to move.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Liar, and slave!</p><p>(Strikimg him.)</p><p>MESSENGER.<br />Let me endure your wrath, if&#039;t be not so.<br />Within this three mile may you see it coming;<br />I say, a moving grove.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />If thou speak&#039;st false,<br />Upon the next tree shalt thou hang alive,<br />Till famine cling thee: if thy speech be sooth,<br />I care not if thou dost for me as much.--<br />I pull in resolution; and begin<br />To doubt the equivocation of the fiend<br />That lies like truth. &quot;Fear not, till Birnam wood<br />Do come to Dunsinane;&quot; and now a wood<br />Comes toward Dunsinane.--Arm, arm, and out!--<br />If this which he avouches does appear,<br />There is nor flying hence nor tarrying here.<br />I &#039;gin to be a-weary of the sun,<br />And wish the estate o&#039; the world were now undone.--<br />Ring the alarum bell!--Blow, wind! come, wrack!<br />At least we&#039;ll die with harness on our back.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE VI. The same. A Plain before the Castle.</p><p>(Enter, with drum and colours, Malcolm, old Siward, Macduff, &amp;c.,<br />and their Army, with boughs.)</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Now near enough; your leafy screens throw down,<br />And show like those you are.--You, worthy uncle,<br />Shall with my cousin, your right-noble son,<br />Lead our first battle: worthy Macduff and we<br />Shall take upon&#039;s what else remains to do,<br />According to our order.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />Fare you well.--<br />Do we but find the tyrant&#039;s power to-night,<br />Let us be beaten, if we cannot fight.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Make all our trumpets speak; give them all breath,<br />Those clamorous harbingers of blood and death.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE VII.&nbsp; The same. Another part of the Plain.</p><p>(Alarums. Enter Macbeth.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />They have tied me to a stake; I cannot fly,<br />But, bear-like I must fight the course.--What&#039;s he<br />That was not born of woman? Such a one<br />Am I to fear, or none.</p><p>(Enter young Siward.)</p><p>YOUNG SIWARD.<br />What is thy name?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Thou&#039;lt be afraid to hear it.</p><p>YOUNG SIWARD.<br />No; though thou call&#039;st thyself a hotter name<br />Than any is in hell.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />My name&#039;s Macbeth.</p><p>YOUNG SIWARD.<br />The devil himself could not pronounce a title<br />More hateful to mine ear.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />No, nor more fearful.</p><p>YOUNG SIWARD.<br />Thou liest, abhorred tyrant; with my sword<br />I&#039;ll prove the lie thou speak&#039;st.</p><p>(They fight, and young Seward is slain.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Thou wast born of woman.--<br />But swords I smile at, weapons laugh to scorn,<br />Brandish&#039;d by man that&#039;s of a woman born.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><p>(Alarums. Enter Macduff.)</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />That way the noise is.--Tyrant, show thy face!<br />If thou be&#039;st slain and with no stroke of mine,<br />My wife and children&#039;s ghosts will haunt me still.<br />I cannot strike at wretched kerns, whose arms<br />Are hired to bear their staves; either thou, Macbeth,<br />Or else my sword, with an unbatter&#039;d edge,<br />I sheathe again undeeded. There thou shouldst be;<br />By this great clatter, one of greatest note<br />Seems bruited. Let me find him, fortune!<br />And more I beg not.</p><p>(Exit. Alarums.)</p><p>(Enter Malcolm and old Siward.)</p><p>SIWARD.<br />This way, my lord;--the castle&#039;s gently render&#039;d:<br />The tyrant&#039;s people on both sides do fight;<br />The noble thanes do bravely in the war;<br />The day almost itself professes yours,<br />And little is to do.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />We have met with foes<br />That strike beside us.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />Enter, sir, the castle.</p><p>(Exeunt. Alarums.)</p><br /><p>SCENE VIII. The same. Another part of the field.</p><p>(Enter Macbeth.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Why should I play the Roman fool, and die<br />On mine own sword? whiles I see lives, the gashes<br />Do better upon them.</p><p>(Enter Macduff.)</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Turn, hell-hound, turn!</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Of all men else I have avoided thee:<br />But get thee back; my soul is too much charg&#039;d<br />With blood of thine already.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />I have no words,--<br />My voice is in my sword: thou bloodier villain<br />Than terms can give thee out!</p><p>(They fight.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Thou losest labour:<br />As easy mayst thou the intrenchant air<br />With thy keen sword impress, as make me bleed:<br />Let fall thy blade on vulnerable crests;<br />I bear a charmed life, which must not yield<br />To one of woman born.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Despair thy charm;<br />And let the angel whom thou still hast serv&#039;d<br />Tell thee, Macduff was from his mother&#039;s womb<br />Untimely ripp&#039;d.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Accursed be that tongue that tells me so,<br />For it hath cow&#039;d my better part of man!<br />And be these juggling fiends no more believ&#039;d,<br />That palter with us in a double sense;<br />That keep the word of promise to our ear,<br />And break it to our hope!--I&#039;ll not fight with thee.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Then yield thee, coward,<br />And live to be the show and gaze o&#039; the time:<br />We&#039;ll have thee, as our rarer monsters are,<br />Painted upon a pole, and underwrit,<br />&quot;Here may you see the tyrant.&quot;</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I will not yield,<br />To kiss the ground before young Malcolm&#039;s feet,<br />And to be baited with the rabble&#039;s curse.<br />Though Birnam wood be come to Dunsinane,<br />And thou oppos&#039;d, being of no woman born,<br />Yet I will try the last. Before my body<br />I throw my warlike shield: lay on, Macduff;<br />And damn&#039;d be him that first cries, &quot;Hold, enough!&quot;</p><p>(Exeunt fighting.)</p><p>(Retreat. Flourish. Enter, with drum and colours, Malcolm, old<br />Siward, Ross, Lennox, Angus, Caithness, Menteith, and Soldiers.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />I would the friends we miss were safe arriv&#039;d.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />Some must go off; and yet, by these I see,<br />So great a day as this is cheaply bought.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Macduff is missing, and your noble son.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Your son, my lord, has paid a soldier&#039;s debt:<br />He only liv&#039;d but till he was a man;<br />The which no sooner had his prowess confirm&#039;d<br />In the unshrinking station where he fought,<br />But like a man he died.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />Then he is dead?</p><p>FLEANCE.<br />Ay, and brought off the field: your cause of sorrow<br />Must not be measur&#039;d by his worth, for then<br />It hath no end.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />Had he his hurts before?</p><p>ROSS.<br />Ay, on the front.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />Why then, God&#039;s soldier be he!<br />Had I as many sons as I have hairs,<br />I would not wish them to a fairer death:<br />And, so his knell is knoll&#039;d.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />He&#039;s worth more sorrow,<br />And that I&#039;ll spend for him.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />He&#039;s worth no more:<br />They say he parted well, and paid his score:<br />And so, God be with him!--Here comes newer comfort.</p><p>(Re-enter Macduff, with Macbeth&#039;s head.)</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Hail, king, for so thou art: behold, where stands<br />The usurper&#039;s cursed head: the time is free:<br />I see thee compass&#039;d with thy kingdom&#039;s pearl<br />That speak my salutation in their minds;<br />Whose voices I desire aloud with mine,--<br />Hail, King of Scotland!</p><p>ALL.<br />Hail, King of Scotland!</p><p>(Flourish.)</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />We shall not spend a large expense of time<br />Before we reckon with your several loves,<br />And make us even with you. My thanes and kinsmen,<br />Henceforth be earls, the first that ever Scotland<br />In such an honour nam&#039;d. What&#039;s more to do,<br />Which would be planted newly with the time,--<br />As calling home our exil&#039;d friends abroad,<br />That fled the snares of watchful tyranny;<br />Producing forth the cruel ministers<br />Of this dead butcher, and his fiend-like queen,--<br />Who, as &#039;tis thought, by self and violent hands<br />Took off her life;--this, and what needful else<br />That calls upon us, by the grace of Grace,<br />We will perform in measure, time, and place:<br />So, thanks to all at once, and to each one,<br />Whom we invite to see us crown&#039;d at Scone.</p><p>(Flourish. Exeunt.)</p>]]></content>
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			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: MACBETH by William Shakespeare]]></title>
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			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>MACDUFF.<br />See, who comes here?</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />My countryman; but yet I know him not.</p><p>(Enter Ross.)</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />My ever-gentle cousin, welcome hither.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />I know him now. Good God, betimes remove<br />The means that makes us strangers!</p><p>ROSS.<br />Sir, amen.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Stands Scotland where it did?</p><p>ROSS.<br />Alas, poor country,--<br />Almost afraid to know itself! It cannot<br />Be call&#039;d our mother, but our grave: where nothing,<br />But who knows nothing, is once seen to smile;<br />Where sighs, and groans, and shrieks, that rent the air,<br />Are made, not mark&#039;d; where violent sorrow seems<br />A modern ecstasy; the dead man&#039;s knell<br />Is there scarce ask&#039;d for who; and good men&#039;s lives<br />Expire before the flowers in their caps,<br />Dying or ere they sicken.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />O, relation<br />Too nice, and yet too true!</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />What&#039;s the newest grief?</p><p>ROSS.<br />That of an hour&#039;s age doth hiss the speaker;<br />Each minute teems a new one.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />How does my wife?</p><p>ROSS.<br />Why, well.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />And all my children?</p><p>ROSS.<br />Well too.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />The tyrant has not batter&#039;d at their peace?</p><p>ROSS.<br />No; they were well at peace when I did leave &#039;em.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Be not a niggard of your speech: how goes&#039;t?</p><p>ROSS.<br />When I came hither to transport the tidings,<br />Which I have heavily borne, there ran a rumour<br />Of many worthy fellows that were out;<br />Which was to my belief witness&#039;d the rather,<br />For that I saw the tyrant&#039;s power a-foot:<br />Now is the time of help; your eye in Scotland<br />Would create soldiers, make our women fight,<br />To doff their dire distresses.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Be&#039;t their comfort<br />We are coming thither: gracious England hath<br />Lent us good Siward and ten thousand men;<br />An older and a better soldier none<br />That Christendom gives out.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Would I could answer<br />This comfort with the like! But I have words<br />That would be howl&#039;d out in the desert air,<br />Where hearing should not latch them.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />What concern they?<br />The general cause? or is it a fee-grief<br />Due to some single breast?</p><p>ROSS.<br />No mind that&#039;s honest<br />But in it shares some woe; though the main part<br />Pertains to you alone.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />If it be mine,<br />Keep it not from me, quickly let me have it.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Let not your ears despise my tongue for ever,<br />Which shall possess them with the heaviest sound<br />That ever yet they heard.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Humh! I guess at it.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Your castle is surpris&#039;d; your wife and babes<br />Savagely slaughter&#039;d: to relate the manner<br />Were, on the quarry of these murder&#039;d deer,<br />To add the death of you.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Merciful heaven!--<br />What, man! ne&#039;er pull your hat upon your brows;<br />Give sorrow words: the grief that does not speak<br />Whispers the o&#039;er-fraught heart, and bids it break.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />My children too?</p><p>ROSS.<br />Wife, children, servants, all<br />That could be found.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />And I must be from thence!<br />My wife kill&#039;d too?</p><p>ROSS.<br />I have said.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Be comforted:<br />Let&#039;s make us medicines of our great revenge,<br />To cure this deadly grief.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />He has no children.--All my pretty ones?<br />Did you say all?--O hell-kite!--All?<br />What, all my pretty chickens and their dam<br />At one fell swoop?</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Dispute it like a man.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />I shall do so;<br />But I must also feel it as a man:<br />I cannot but remember such things were,<br />That were most precious to me.--Did heaven look on,<br />And would not take their part? Sinful Macduff,<br />They were all struck for thee! naught that I am,<br />Not for their own demerits, but for mine,<br />Fell slaughter on their souls: heaven rest them now!</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Be this the whetstone of your sword. Let grief<br />Convert to anger; blunt not the heart, enrage it.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />O, I could play the woman with mine eye,<br />And braggart with my tongue!--But, gentle heavens,<br />Cut short all intermission; front to front<br />Bring thou this fiend of Scotland and myself;<br />Within my sword&#039;s length set him; if he &#039;scape,<br />Heaven forgive him too!</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />This tune goes manly.<br />Come, go we to the king; our power is ready;<br />Our lack is nothing but our leave: Macbeth<br />Is ripe for shaking, and the powers above<br />Put on their instruments. Receive what cheer you may;<br />The night is long that never finds the day.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>ACT V.</p><p>SCENE I. Dunsinane. A Room in the Castle.</p><p>(Enter a Doctor of Physic and a Waiting-Gentlewoman.)</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />I have two nights watched with you, but can perceive no<br />truth in your report. When was it she last walked?</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />Since his majesty went into the field, I have seen her<br />rise from her bed, throw her nightgown upon her, unlock her<br />closet, take forth paper, fold it, write upon it, read it,<br />afterwards seal it, and again return to bed; yet all this<br />while in a most fast sleep.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />A great perturbation in nature,--to receive at once the<br />benefit of sleep, and do the effects of watching-- In this<br />slumbery agitation, besides her walking and other actual<br />performances, what, at any time, have you heard her say?</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />That, sir, which I will not report after her.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />You may to me; and &#039;tis most meet you should.</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />Neither to you nor any one; having no witness to confirm my<br />speech. Lo you, here she comes! </p><p>(Enter Lady Macbeth, with a taper.)</p><p>This is her very guise; and, upon my life, fast asleep. Observe<br />her; stand close.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />How came she by that light?</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />Why, it stood by her: she has light by her continually; &#039;tis her<br />command.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />You see, her eyes are open.</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />Ay, but their sense is shut.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />What is it she does now? Look how she rubs her hands.</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />It is an accustomed action with her, to seem thus washing her<br />hands: I have known her continue in this a quarter of an hour.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Yet here&#039;s a spot.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Hark, she speaks: I will set down what comes from her, to<br />satisfy my remembrance the more strongly.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Out, damned spot! out, I say!-- One; two; why, then &#039;tis<br />time to do&#039;t ;--Hell is murky!--Fie, my lord, fie! a soldier,<br />and afeard? What need we fear who knows it, when none can call<br />our power to account?--Yet who would have thought the old man to<br />have had so much blood in him?</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Do you mark that?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />The Thane of Fife had a wife; where is she now?--What,<br />will these hands ne&#039;er be clean? No more o&#039; that, my lord, no<br />more o&#039; that: you mar all with this starting.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Go to, go to; you have known what you should not.</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />She has spoke what she should not, I am sure of that:<br />heaven knows what she has known.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Here&#039;s the smell of the blood still: all the perfumes<br />of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand. Oh, oh, oh!</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />What a sigh is there! The heart is sorely charged.</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />I would not have such a heart in my bosom for the<br />dignity of the whole body.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Well, well, well,--</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />Pray God it be, sir.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />This disease is beyond my practice: yet I have known those<br />which have walked in their sleep who have died holily in<br />their beds.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Wash your hands, put on your nightgown; look not so<br />pale:--I tell you yet again, Banquo&#039;s buried; he cannot come<br />out on&#039;s grave.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Even so?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />To bed, to bed; there&#039;s knocking at the gate: come, come, come,<br />come, give me your hand: what&#039;s done cannot be undone: to bed, to<br />bed, to bed.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Will she go now to bed?</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />Directly.</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Foul whisperings are abroad: unnatural deeds<br />Do breed unnatural troubles: infected minds<br />To their deaf pillows will discharge their secrets.<br />More needs she the divine than the physician.--<br />God, God, forgive us all!--Look after her;<br />Remove from her the means of all annoyance,<br />And still keep eyes upon her:--so, good-night:<br />My mind she has mated, and amaz&#039;d my sight:<br />I think, but dare not speak.</p><p>GENTLEWOMAN.<br />Good-night, good doctor.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE II. The Country near Dunsinane.</p><p>(Enter. with drum and colours, Menteith, Caithness, Angus,<br />Lennox, and Soldiers.)</p><p>MENTEITH.<br />The English power is near, led on by Malcolm,<br />His uncle Siward, and the good Macduff.<br />Revenges burn in them; for their dear causes<br />Would to the bleeding and the grim alarm<br />Excite the mortified man.</p><p>ANGUS.<br />Near Birnam wood<br />Shall we well meet them; that way are they coming.</p><p>CAITHNESS.<br />Who knows if Donalbain be with his brother?</p><p>LENNOX.<br />For certain, sir, he is not: I have a file<br />Of all the gentry: there is Siward&#039;s son<br />And many unrough youths, that even now<br />Protest their first of manhood.</p><p>MENTEITH.<br />What does the tyrant?</p><p>CAITHNESS.<br />Great Dunsinane he strongly fortifies:<br />Some say he&#039;s mad; others, that lesser hate him,<br />Do call it valiant fury: but, for certain,<br />He cannot buckle his distemper&#039;d cause<br />Within the belt of rule.</p><p>ANGUS.<br />Now does he feel<br />His secret murders sticking on his hands;<br />Now minutely revolts upbraid his faith-breach;<br />Those he commands move only in command,<br />Nothing in love: now does he feel his title<br />Hang loose about him, like a giant&#039;s robe<br />Upon a dwarfish thief.</p><p>MENTEITH.<br />Who, then, shall blame<br />His pester&#039;d senses to recoil and start,<br />When all that is within him does condemn<br />Itself for being there?</p><p>CAITHNESS.<br />Well, march we on,<br />To give obedience where &#039;tis truly ow&#039;d:<br />Meet we the medicine of the sickly weal;<br />And with him pour we, in our country&#039;s purge,<br />Each drop of us.</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Or so much as it needs,<br />To dew the sovereign flower, and drown the weeds.<br />Make we our march towards Birnam.</p><p>(Exeunt, marching.)</p><br /><p>SCENE III. Dunsinane. A Room in the Castle.</p><p>(Enter Macbeth, Doctor, and Attendants.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Bring me no more reports; let them fly all:<br />Till Birnam wood remove to Dunsinane<br />I cannot taint with fear. What&#039;s the boy Malcolm?<br />Was he not born of woman? The spirits that know<br />All mortal consequences have pronounc&#039;d me thus,--<br />&quot;Fear not, Macbeth; no man that&#039;s born of woman<br />Shall e&#039;er have power upon thee.&quot;--Then fly, false thanes,<br />And mingle with the English epicures:<br />The mind I sway by, and the heart I bear,<br />Shall never sag with doubt nor shake with fear.</p><p>(Enter a Servant.)</p><p>The devil damn thee black, thou cream-fac&#039;d loon!<br />Where gott&#039;st thou that goose look?</p><p>SERVANT.<br />There is ten thousand--</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Geese, villain?</p><p>SERVANT.<br />Soldiers, sir.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Go prick thy face and over-red thy fear,<br />Thou lily-liver&#039;d boy. What soldiers, patch?<br />Death of thy soul! those linen cheeks of thine<br />Are counsellors to fear. What soldiers, whey-face?</p><p>SERVANT.<br />The English force, so please you.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Take thy face hence.</p><p>(Exit Servant.)</p><p>Seyton!--I am sick at heart,<br />When I behold--Seyton, I say!- This push<br />Will chair me ever or disseat me now.<br />I have liv&#039;d long enough: my way of life<br />Is fall&#039;n into the sear, the yellow leaf;<br />And that which should accompany old age,<br />As honour, love, obedience, troops of friends,<br />I must not look to have; but, in their stead,<br />Curses, not loud but deep, mouth-honour, breath,<br />Which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare not.<br />Seyton!--</p><p>(Enter Seyton.)</p><p>SEYTON.<br />What&#039;s your gracious pleasure?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />What news more?</p><p>SEYTON.<br />All is confirm&#039;d, my lord, which was reported.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I&#039;ll fight till from my bones my flesh be hack&#039;d.<br />Give me my armour.</p><p>SEYTON.<br />&#039;Tis not needed yet.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I&#039;ll put it on.<br />Send out more horses, skirr the country round;<br />Hang those that talk of fear.--Give me mine armour.--<br />How does your patient, doctor?</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Not so sick, my lord,<br />As she is troubled with thick-coming fancies,<br />That keep her from her rest.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Cure her of that:<br />Canst thou not minister to a mind diseas&#039;d;<br />Pluck from the memory a rooted sorrow;<br />Raze out the written troubles of the brain;<br />And with some sweet oblivious antidote<br />Cleanse the stuff&#039;d bosom of that perilous stuff<br />Which weighs upon the heart?</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Therein the patient<br />Must minister to himself.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Throw physic to the dogs,--I&#039;ll none of it.--<br />Come, put mine armour on; give me my staff:--<br />Seyton, send out.--Doctor, the Thanes fly from me.--<br />Come, sir, despatch.--If thou couldst, doctor, cast<br />The water of my land, find her disease,<br />And purge it to a sound and pristine health,<br />I would applaud thee to the very echo,<br />That should applaud again.--Pull&#039;t off, I say.--<br />What rhubarb, senna, or what purgative drug,<br />Would scour these English hence? Hear&#039;st thou of them?</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Ay, my good lord; your royal preparation<br />Makes us hear something.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Bring it after me.--<br />I will not be afraid of death and bane,<br />Till Birnam forest come to Dunsinane.</p><p>(Exeunt all except Doctor.)</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Were I from Dunsinane away and clear,<br />Profit again should hardly draw me here.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><br /><p>SCENE IV. Country nearDunsinane: a Wood in view.</p><p>(Enter, with drum and colours, Malcolm, old Siward and his Son,<br />Macduff, Menteith, Caithness, Angus, Lennox, Ross, and Soldiers,<br />marching.)</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Cousins, I hope the days are near at hand<br />That chambers will be safe.</p><p>MENTEITH.<br />We doubt it nothing.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />What wood is this before us?</p><p>MENTEITH.<br />The wood of Birnam.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Let every soldier hew him down a bough,<br />And bear&#039;t before him; thereby shall we shadow<br />The numbers of our host, and make discovery<br />Err in report of us.</p><p>SOLDIERS.<br />It shall be done.</p><p>SIWARD.<br />We learn no other but the confident tyrant<br />Keeps still in Dunsinane, and will endure<br />Our setting down before&#039;t.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />&#039;Tis his main hope:<br />For where there is advantage to be given,<br />Both more and less have given him the revolt;<br />And none serve with him but constrained things,<br />Whose hearts are absent too.</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[Giperion]]></name>
				<uri>http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/profile.php?id=2</uri>
			</author>
			<updated>2016-07-28T22:43:32Z</updated>
			<id>http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1230#p1230</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: MACBETH by William Shakespeare]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1229#p1229" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>(Enter Macbeth.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />How now, you secret, black, and midnight hags!<br />What is&#039;t you do?</p><p>ALL.<br />A deed without a name.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I conjure you, by that which you profess,--<br />Howe&#039;er you come to know it,--answer me:<br />Though you untie the winds, and let them fight<br />Against the churches; though the yesty waves<br />Confound and swallow navigation up;<br />Though bladed corn be lodg&#039;d, and trees blown down;<br />Though castles topple on their warders&#039; heads;<br />Though palaces and pyramids do slope<br />Their heads to their foundations; though the treasure<br />Of nature&#039;s germins tumble all together,<br />Even till destruction sicken,--answer me<br />To what I ask you.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Speak.</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Demand.</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />We&#039;ll answer.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Say, if thou&#039;dst rather hear it from our mouths,<br />Or from our masters?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Call &#039;em, let me see &#039;em.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Pour in sow&#039;s blood, that hath eaten<br />Her nine farrow; grease that&#039;s sweaten<br />From the murderer&#039;s gibbet throw<br />Into the flame.</p><p>ALL.<br />Come, high or low;<br />Thyself and office deftly show!</p><p>(Thunder. An Apparition of an armed Head rises.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Tell me, thou unknown power,--</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />He knows thy thought:<br />Hear his speech, but say thou naught.</p><p>APPARITION.<br />Macbeth! Macbeth! Macbeth! Beware Macduff;<br />Beware the Thane of Fife.--Dismiss me:--enough.</p><p>(Descends.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Whate&#039;er thou art, for thy good caution, thanks;<br />Thou hast harp&#039;d my fear aright:--but one word more,--</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />He will not be commanded: here&#039;s another,<br />More potent than the first.</p><p>(Thunder. An Apparition of a bloody Child rises.)</p><p>APPARITION.--<br />Macbeth! Macbeth! Macbeth!</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Had I three ears, I&#039;d hear thee.</p><p>APPARITION.<br />Be bloody, bold, and resolute; laugh to scorn<br />The power of man, for none of woman born<br />Shall harm Macbeth.</p><p>(Descends.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Then live, Macduff: what need I fear of thee?<br />But yet I&#039;ll make assurance double sure,<br />And take a bond of fate: thou shalt not live;<br />That I may tell pale-hearted fear it lies,<br />And sleep in spite of thunder.--What is this,</p><p>(Thunder. An Apparition of a Child crowned, with a tree in his<br />hand, rises.)</p><p>That rises like the issue of a king,<br />And wears upon his baby brow the round<br />And top of sovereignty?</p><p>ALL.<br />Listen, but speak not to&#039;t.</p><p>APPARITION.<br />Be lion-mettled, proud; and take no care<br />Who chafes, who frets, or where conspirers are:<br />Macbeth shall never vanquish&#039;d be, until<br />Great Birnam wood to high Dunsinane hill<br />Shall come against him.</p><p>(Descends.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />That will never be:<br />Who can impress the forest; bid the tree<br />Unfix his earth-bound root? Sweet bodements, good!<br />Rebellion&#039;s head, rise never till the wood<br />Of Birnam rise, and our high-plac&#039;d Macbeth<br />Shall live the lease of nature, pay his breath<br />To time and mortal custom.--Yet my heart<br />Throbs to know one thing: tell me,--if your art<br />Can tell so much,--shall Banquo&#039;s issue ever<br />Reign in this kingdom?</p><p>ALL.<br />Seek to know no more.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I will be satisfied: deny me this,<br />And an eternal curse fall on you! Let me know:--<br />Why sinks that cauldron? and what noise is this?</p><p>(Hautboys.)</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Show!</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Show!</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />Show!</p><p>ALL.<br />Show his eyes, and grieve his heart;<br />Come like shadows, so depart!</p><p>(Eight kings appear, and pass over in order, the last with a<br />glass in his hand; Banquo following.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Thou are too like the spirit of Banquo; down!<br />Thy crown does sear mine eyeballs:--and thy hair,<br />Thou other gold-bound brow, is like the first;--<br />A third is like the former.--Filthy hags!<br />Why do you show me this?--A fourth!--Start, eyes!<br />What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?<br />Another yet!--A seventh!--I&#039;ll see no more:--<br />And yet the eighth appears, who bears a glass<br />Which shows me many more; and some I see<br />That twofold balls and treble sceptres carry:<br />Horrible sight!--Now I see &#039;tis true;<br />For the blood-bolter&#039;d Banquo smiles upon me,<br />And points at them for his.--What! is this so?</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Ay, sir, all this is so:--but why<br />Stands Macbeth thus amazedly?--<br />Come,sisters, cheer we up his sprites,<br />And show the best of our delights;<br />I&#039;ll charm the air to give a sound,<br />While you perform your antic round;<br />That this great king may kindly say,<br />Our duties did his welcome pay.</p><p>(Music. The Witches dance, and then vanish.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Where are they? Gone?--Let this pernicious hour<br />Stand aye accursed in the calendar!--<br />Come in, without there!</p><p>(Enter Lennox.)</p><p>LENNOX.<br />What&#039;s your grace&#039;s will?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Saw you the weird sisters?</p><p>LENNOX.<br />No, my lord.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Came they not by you?</p><p>LENNOX.<br />No indeed, my lord.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Infected be the air whereon they ride;<br />And damn&#039;d all those that trust them!--I did hear<br />The galloping of horse: who was&#039;t came by?</p><p>LENNOX.<br />&#039;Tis two or three, my lord, that bring you word<br />Macduff is fled to England.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Fled to England!</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Ay, my good lord.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Time, thou anticipat&#039;st my dread exploits:<br />The flighty purpose never is o&#039;ertook<br />Unless the deed go with it: from this moment<br />The very firstlings of my heart shall be<br />The firstlings of my hand. And even now,<br />To crown my thoughts with acts, be it thought and done:<br />The castle of Macduff I will surprise;<br />Seize upon Fife; give to the edge o&#039; the sword<br />His wife, his babes, and all unfortunate souls<br />That trace him in his line. No boasting like a fool;<br />This deed I&#039;ll do before this purpose cool:<br />But no more sights!--Where are these gentlemen?<br />Come, bring me where they are.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE II. Fife. A Room in Macduff&#039;s Castle.</p><p>(Enter Lady Macduff, her Son, and Ross.)</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />What had he done, to make him fly the land?</p><p>ROSS.<br />You must have patience, madam.</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />He had none:<br />His flight was madness: when our actions do not,<br />Our fears do make us traitors.</p><p>ROSS.<br />You know not<br />Whether it was his wisdom or his fear.</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Wisdom! to leave his wife, to leave his babes,<br />His mansion, and his titles, in a place<br />From whence himself does fly? He loves us not:<br />He wants the natural touch; for the poor wren,<br />The most diminutive of birds, will fight,<br />Her young ones in her nest, against the owl.<br />All is the fear, and nothing is the love;<br />As little is the wisdom, where the flight<br />So runs against all reason.</p><p>ROSS.<br />My dearest coz,<br />I pray you, school yourself: but, for your husband,<br />He is noble, wise, Judicious, and best knows<br />The fits o&#039; the season. I dare not speak much further:<br />But cruel are the times, when we are traitors,<br />And do not know ourselves; when we hold rumour<br />From what we fear, yet know not what we fear,<br />But float upon a wild and violent sea<br />Each way and move.--I take my leave of you:<br />Shall not be long but I&#039;ll be here again:<br />Things at the worst will cease, or else climb upward<br />To what they were before.--My pretty cousin,<br />Blessing upon you!</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Father&#039;d he is, and yet he&#039;s fatherless.</p><p>ROSS.<br />I am so much a fool, should I stay longer,<br />It would be my disgrace and your discomfort:<br />I take my leave at once.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Sirrah, your father&#039;s dead;<br />And what will you do now? How will you live?</p><p>SON.<br />As birds do, mother.</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />What, with worms and flies?</p><p>SON.<br />With what I get, I mean; and so do they.</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Poor bird! thou&#039;dst never fear the net nor lime,<br />The pit-fall nor the gin.</p><p>SON.<br />Why should I, mother? Poor birds they are not set for.<br />My father is not dead, for all your saying.</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Yes, he is dead: how wilt thou do for father?</p><p>SON.<br />Nay, how will you do for a husband?</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Why, I can buy me twenty at any market.</p><p>SON.<br />Then you&#039;ll buy &#039;em to sell again.</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Thou speak&#039;st with all thy wit; and yet, i&#039; faith,<br />With wit enough for thee.</p><p>SON.<br />Was my father a traitor, mother?</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Ay, that he was.</p><p>SON.<br />What is a traitor?</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Why, one that swears and lies.</p><p>SON.<br />And be all traitors that do so?</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Everyone that does so is a traitor, and must be hanged.</p><p>SON.<br />And must they all be hanged that swear and lie?</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Every one.</p><p>SON.<br />Who must hang them?</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Why, the honest men.</p><p>SON.<br />Then the liars and swearers are fools: for there are liars<br />and swearers enow to beat the honest men and hang up them.</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Now, God help thee, poor monkey! But how wilt<br />thou do for a father?</p><p>SON.<br />If he were dead, you&#039;ld weep for him: if you would not, it<br />were a good sign that I should quickly have a new father.</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Poor prattler, how thou talk&#039;st!</p><p>(Enter a Messenger.)</p><p>MESSENGER.<br />Bless you, fair dame! I am not to you known,<br />Though in your state of honor I am perfect.<br />I doubt some danger does approach you nearly:<br />If you will take a homely man&#039;s advice,<br />Be not found here; hence, with your little ones.<br />To fright you thus, methinks, I am too savage;<br />To do worse to you were fell cruelty,<br />Which is too nigh your person. Heaven preserve you!<br />I dare abide no longer.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />Whither should I fly?<br />I have done no harm. But I remember now<br />I am in this earthly world; where to do harm<br />Is often laudable; to do good sometime<br />Accounted dangerous folly:&nbsp; why then, alas,<br />Do I put up that womanly defence,<br />To say I have done no harm?--What are these faces?</p><p>(Enter Murderers.)</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />Where is your husband?</p><p>LADY MACDUFF.<br />I hope, in no place so unsanctified<br />Where such as thou mayst find him.</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />He&#039;s a traitor.</p><p>SON.<br />Thou liest, thou shag-haar&#039;d villain!</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />What, you egg!</p><p>(Stabbing him.)</p><p>Young fry of treachery!</p><p>SON.<br />He has kill&#039;d me, mother:<br />Run away, I pray you!</p><p>(Dies. Exit Lady Macduff, crying Murder, and pursued by the<br />Murderers.)</p><br /><p>SCENE III. England. Before the King&#039;s Palace.</p><p>(Enter Malcolm and Macduff.)</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Let us seek out some desolate shade and there<br />Weep our sad bosoms empty.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Let us rather<br />Hold fast the mortal sword, and, like good men,<br />Bestride our down-fall&#039;n birthdom: each new morn<br />New widows howl; new orphans cry; new sorrows<br />Strike heaven on the face, that it resounds<br />As if it felt with Scotland, and yell&#039;d out<br />Like syllable of dolour.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />What I believe, I&#039;ll wail;<br />What know, believe; and what I can redress,<br />As I shall find the time to friend, I will.<br />What you have spoke, it may be so perchance.<br />This tyrant, whose sole name blisters our tongues,<br />Was once thought honest: you have loved him well;<br />He hath not touch&#039;d you yet. I am young; but something<br />You may deserve of him through me; and wisdom<br />To offer up a weak, poor, innocent lamb<br />To appease an angry god.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />I am not treacherous.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />But Macbeth is.<br />A good and virtuous nature may recoil<br />In an imperial charge. But I shall crave your pardon;<br />That which you are, my thoughts cannot transpose;<br />Angels are bright still, though the brightest fell:<br />Though all things foul would wear the brows of grace,<br />Yet grace must still look so.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />I have lost my hopes.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Perchance even there where I did find my doubts.<br />Why in that rawness left you wife and child,--<br />Those precious motives, those strong knots of love,--<br />Without leave-taking?--I pray you,<br />Let not my jealousies be your dishonors,<br />But mine own safeties:--you may be rightly just,<br />Whatever I shall think.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Bleed, bleed, poor country!<br />Great tyranny, lay thou thy basis sure,<br />For goodness dare not check thee! wear thou thy wrongs,<br />The title is affeer&#039;d.--Fare thee well, lord:<br />I would not be the villain that thou think&#039;st<br />For the whole space that&#039;s in the tyrant&#039;s grasp<br />And the rich East to boot.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Be not offended:<br />I speak not as in absolute fear of you.<br />I think our country sinks beneath the yoke;<br />It weeps, it bleeds; and each new day a gash<br />Is added to her wounds. I think, withal,<br />There would be hands uplifted in my right;<br />And here, from gracious England, have I offer<br />Of goodly thousands: but, for all this,<br />When I shall tread upon the tyrant&#039;s head,<br />Or wear it on my sword, yet my poor country<br />Shall have more vices than it had before;<br />More suffer, and more sundry ways than ever,<br />By him that shall succeed.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />What should he be?</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />It is myself I mean: in whom I know<br />All the particulars of vice so grafted<br />That, when they shall be open&#039;d, black Macbeth<br />Will seem as pure as snow; and the poor state<br />Esteem him as a lamb, being compar&#039;d<br />With my confineless harms.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Not in the legions<br />Of horrid hell can come a devil more damn&#039;d<br />In evils to top Macbeth.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />I grant him bloody,<br />Luxurious, avaricious, false, deceitful,<br />Sudden, malicious, smacking of every sin<br />That has a name: but there&#039;s no bottom, none,<br />In my voluptuousness: your wives, your daughters,<br />Your matrons, and your maids, could not fill up<br />The cistern of my lust; and my desire<br />All continent impediments would o&#039;erbear,<br />That did oppose my will: better Macbeth<br />Than such an one to reign.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Boundless intemperance<br />In nature is a tyranny; it hath been<br />The untimely emptying of the happy throne,<br />And fall of many kings. But fear not yet<br />To take upon you what is yours: you may<br />Convey your pleasures in a spacious plenty,<br />And yet seem cold, the time you may so hoodwink.<br />We have willing dames enough; there cannot be<br />That vulture in you, to devour so many<br />As will to greatness dedicate themselves,<br />Finding it so inclin&#039;d.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />With this there grows,<br />In my most ill-compos&#039;d affection, such<br />A stanchless avarice, that, were I king,<br />I should cut off the nobles for their lands;<br />Desire his jewels, and this other&#039;s house:<br />And my more-having would be as a sauce<br />To make me hunger more; that I should forge<br />Quarrels unjust against the good and loyal,<br />Destroying them for wealth.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />This avarice<br />Sticks deeper; grows with more pernicious root<br />Than summer-seeming lust; and it hath been<br />The sword of our slain kings: yet do not fear;<br />Scotland hath foysons to fill up your will,<br />Of your mere own: all these are portable,<br />With other graces weigh&#039;d.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />But I have none: the king-becoming graces,<br />As justice, verity, temperance, stableness,<br />Bounty, perseverance, mercy, lowliness,<br />Devotion, patience, courage, fortitude,<br />I have no relish of them; but abound<br />In the division of each several crime,<br />Acting it many ways. Nay, had I power, I should<br />Pour the sweet milk of concord into hell,<br />Uproar the universal peace, confound<br />All unity on earth.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />O Scotland, Scotland!</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />If such a one be fit to govern, speak:<br />I am as I have spoken.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Fit to govern!<br />No, not to live!--O nation miserable,<br />With an untitled tyrant bloody-scepter&#039;d,<br />When shalt thou see thy wholesome days again,<br />Since that the truest issue of thy throne<br />By his own interdiction stands accurs&#039;d<br />And does blaspheme his breed?--Thy royal father<br />Was a most sainted king; the queen that bore thee,<br />Oftener upon her knees than on her feet,<br />Died every day she lived. Fare-thee-well!<br />These evils thou repeat&#039;st upon thyself<br />Have banish&#039;d me from Scotland.--O my breast,<br />Thy hope ends here!</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Macduff, this noble passion,<br />Child of integrity, hath from my soul<br />Wiped the black scruples, reconcil&#039;d my thoughts<br />To thy good truth and honour. Devilish Macbeth<br />By many of these trains hath sought to win me<br />Into his power; and modest wisdom plucks me<br />From over-credulous haste: but God above<br />Deal between thee and me! for even now<br />I put myself to thy direction, and<br />Unspeak mine own detraction; here abjure<br />The taints and blames I laid upon myself,<br />For strangers to my nature. I am yet<br />Unknown to woman; never was forsworn;<br />Scarcely have coveted what was mine own;<br />At no time broke my faith; would not betray<br />The devil to his fellow; and delight<br />No less in truth than life: my first false speaking<br />Was this upon myself:--what I am truly,<br />Is thine and my poor country&#039;s to command:<br />Whither, indeed, before thy here-approach,<br />Old Siward, with ten thousand warlike men<br />Already at a point, was setting forth:<br />Now we&#039;ll together; and the chance of goodness<br />Be like our warranted quarrel! Why are you silent?</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Such welcome and unwelcome things at once<br />&#039;Tis hard to reconcile.</p><p>(Enter a Doctor.)</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Well; more anon.--Comes the king forth, I pray you?</p><p>DOCTOR.<br />Ay, sir: there are a crew of wretched souls<br />That stay his cure: their malady convinces<br />The great assay of art; but, at his touch,<br />Such sanctity hath heaven given his hand,<br />They presently amend.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />I thank you, doctor.</p><p>(Exit Doctor.)</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />What&#039;s the disease he means?</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />&#039;Tis call&#039;d the evil:<br />A most miraculous work in this good king;<br />Which often, since my here-remain in England,<br />I have seen him do. How he solicits heaven,<br />Himself best knows: but strangely-visited people,<br />All swoln and ulcerous, pitiful to the eye,<br />The mere despair of surgery, he cures;<br />Hanging a golden stamp about their necks,<br />Put on with holy prayers: and &#039;tis spoken,<br />To the succeeding royalty he leaves<br />The healing benediction. With this strange virtue,<br />He hath a heavenly gift of prophecy;<br />And sundry blessings hang about his throne,<br />That speak him full of grace.</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[Giperion]]></name>
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			<updated>2016-07-28T22:43:09Z</updated>
			<id>http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1229#p1229</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: MACBETH by William Shakespeare]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1228#p1228" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>LADY MACBETH.<br />But in them nature&#039;s copy&#039;s not eterne.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />There&#039;s comfort yet; they are assailable;<br />Then be thou jocund: ere the bat hath flown<br />His cloister&#039;d flight, ere to black Hecate&#039;s summons,<br />The shard-borne beetle, with his drowsy hums,<br />Hath rung night&#039;s yawning peal, there shall be done<br />A deed of dreadful note.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />What&#039;s to be done?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest chuck,<br />Till thou applaud the deed. Come, seeling night,<br />Scarf up the tender eye of pitiful day;<br />And with thy bloody and invisible hand<br />Cancel and tear to pieces that great bond<br />Which keeps me pale!--Light thickens; and the crow<br />Makes wing to the rooky wood:<br />Good things of day begin to droop and drowse;<br />Whiles night&#039;s black agents to their preys do rouse.--<br />Thou marvell&#039;st at my words: but hold thee still;<br />Things bad begun make strong themselves by ill:<br />So, pr&#039;ythee, go with me.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE III. The same. A Park or Lawn, with a gate leading to the<br />Palace.</p><p>(Enter three Murderers.)</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />But who did bid thee join with us?</p><p>THIRD MURDERER.<br />Macbeth.</p><p>SECOND MURDERER.<br />He needs not our mistrust; since he delivers<br />Our offices and what we have to do<br />To the direction just.</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />Then stand with us.<br />The west yet glimmers with some streaks of day:<br />Now spurs the lated traveller apace,<br />To gain the timely inn; and near approaches<br />The subject of our watch.</p><p>THIRD MURDERER.<br />Hark! I hear horses.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />(Within.) Give us a light there, ho!</p><p>SECOND MURDERER.<br />Then &#039;tis he; the rest<br />That are within the note of expectation<br />Already are i&#039; the court.</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />His horses go about.</p><p>THIRD MURDERER.<br />Almost a mile; but he does usually,<br />So all men do, from hence to the palace gate<br />Make it their walk.</p><p>SECOND MURDERER.<br />A light, a light!</p><p>THIRD MURDERER.<br />&#039;Tis he.</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />Stand to&#039;t.</p><p>(Enter Banquo, and Fleance with a torch.)</p><p>BANQUO.<br />It will be rain to-night.</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />Let it come down.</p><p>(Assaults Banquo.)</p><p>BANQUO.<br />O, treachery! Fly, good Fleance, fly, fly, fly!<br />Thou mayst revenge.--O slave!</p><p>(Dies. Fleance escapes.)</p><p>THIRD MURDERER.<br />Who did strike out the light?</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />Was&#039;t not the way?</p><p>THIRD MURDERER.<br />There&#039;s but one down: the son is fled.</p><p>SECOND MURDERER.<br />We have lost best half of our affair.</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />Well, let&#039;s away, and say how much is done.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE IV. The same. A Room of state in the Palace. A banquet<br />prepared.</p><p>(Enter Macbeth, Lady Macbeth, Ross, Lennox, Lords, and<br />Attendants.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />You know your own degrees: sit down. At first<br />And last the hearty welcome.</p><p>LORDS.<br />Thanks to your majesty.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Ourself will mingle with society,<br />And play the humble host.<br />Our hostess keeps her state; but, in best time,<br />We will require her welcome.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Pronounce it for me, sir, to all our friends;<br />For my heart speaks they are welcome.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />See, they encounter thee with their hearts&#039; thanks.--<br />Both sides are even: here I&#039;ll sit i&#039; the midst:</p><p>(Enter first Murderer to the door.)</p><p>Be large in mirth; anon we&#039;ll drink a measure<br />The table round.--There&#039;s blood upon thy face.</p><p>MURDERER.<br />&#039;Tis Banquo&#039;s then.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />&#039;Tis better thee without than he within.<br />Is he despatch&#039;d?</p><p>MURDERER.<br />My lord, his throat is cut; that I did for him.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Thou art the best o&#039; the cut-throats; yet he&#039;s good<br />That did the like for Fleance: if thou didst it,<br />Thou art the nonpareil.</p><p>MURDERER.<br />Most royal sir,<br />Fleance is &#039;scap&#039;d.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Then comes my fit again: I had else been perfect;<br />Whole as the marble, founded as the rock;<br />As broad and general as the casing air:<br />But now I am cabin&#039;d, cribb&#039;d, confin&#039;d, bound in<br />To saucy doubts and fears. But Banquo&#039;s safe?</p><p>MURDERER.<br />Ay, my good lord: safe in a ditch he bides,<br />With twenty trenched gashes on his head;<br />The least a death to nature.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Thanks for that:<br />There the grown serpent lies; the worm that&#039;s fled<br />Hath nature that in time will venom breed,<br />No teeth for the present.--Get thee gone; to-morrow<br />We&#039;ll hear, ourselves, again.</p><p>(Exit Murderer.)</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />My royal lord,<br />You do not give the cheer: the feast is sold<br />That is not often vouch&#039;d, while &#039;tis a-making,<br />&#039;Tis given with welcome; to feed were best at home;<br />From thence the sauce to meat is ceremony;<br />Meeting were bare without it.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Sweet remembrancer!--<br />Now, good digestion wait on appetite,<br />And health on both!</p><p>LENNOX.<br />May&#039;t please your highness sit.</p><p>(The Ghost of Banquo rises, and sits in Macbeth&#039;s place.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Here had we now our country&#039;s honor roof&#039;d,<br />Were the grac&#039;d person of our Banquo present;<br />Who may I rather challenge for unkindness<br />Than pity for mischance!</p><p>ROSS.<br />His absence, sir,<br />Lays blame upon his promise. Please&#039;t your highness<br />To grace us with your royal company?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />The table&#039;s full.</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Here is a place reserv&#039;d, sir.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Where?</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Here, my good lord. What is&#039;t that moves your highness?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Which of you have done this?</p><p>LORDS.<br />What, my good lord?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Thou canst not say I did it: never shake<br />Thy gory locks at me.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Gentlemen, rise; his highness is not well.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Sit, worthy friends:--my lord is often thus,<br />And hath been from his youth: pray you, keep seat;<br />The fit is momentary; upon a thought<br />He will again be well: if much you note him,<br />You shall offend him, and extend his passion:<br />Feed, and regard him not.--Are you a man?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Ay, and a bold one, that dare look on that<br />Which might appal the devil.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />O proper stuff!<br />This is the very painting of your fear:<br />This is the air-drawn dagger which, you said,<br />Led you to Duncan. O, these flaws, and starts,--<br />Impostors to true fear,--would well become<br />A woman&#039;s story at a winter&#039;s fire,<br />Authoriz&#039;d by her grandam. Shame itself!<br />Why do you make such faces? When all&#039;s done,<br />You look but on a stool.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Pr&#039;ythee, see there! behold! look! lo! how say you?--<br />Why, what care I? If thou canst nod, speak too.--<br />If charnel houses and our graves must send<br />Those that we bury back, our monuments<br />Shall be the maws of kites.</p><p>(Ghost disappears.)</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />What, quite unmann&#039;d in folly?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />If I stand here, I saw him.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Fie, for shame!</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Blood hath been shed ere now, i&#039; the olden time,<br />Ere humane statute purg&#039;d the gentle weal;<br />Ay, and since too, murders have been perform&#039;d<br />Too terrible for the ear: the time has been,<br />That, when the brains were out, the man would die,<br />And there an end; but now they rise again,<br />With twenty mortal murders on their crowns,<br />And push us from our stools: this is more strange<br />Than such a murder is.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />My worthy lord,<br />Your noble friends do lack you.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I do forget:--<br />Do not muse at me, my most worthy friends;<br />I have a strange infirmity, which is nothing<br />To those that know me. Come, love and health to all;<br />Then I&#039;ll sit down.--Give me some wine, fill full.--<br />I drink to the general joy o&#039; the whole table,<br />And to our dear friend Banquo, whom we miss:<br />Would he were here! to all, and him, we thirst,<br />And all to all.</p><p>LORDS.<br />Our duties, and the pledge.</p><p>(Ghost rises again.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Avaunt! and quit my sight! let the earth hide thee!<br />Thy bones are marrowless, thy blood is cold;<br />Thou hast no speculation in those eyes<br />Which thou dost glare with!</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Think of this, good peers,<br />But as a thing of custom: &#039;tis no other,<br />Only it spoils the pleasure of the time.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />What man dare, I dare:<br />Approach thou like the rugged Russian bear,<br />The arm&#039;d rhinoceros, or the Hyrcan tiger;<br />Take any shape but that, and my firm nerves<br />Shall never tremble: or be alive again,<br />And dare me to the desert with thy sword;<br />If trembling I inhabit then, protest me<br />The baby of a girl. Hence, horrible shadow!<br />Unreal mockery, hence!</p><p>(Ghost disappears.)</p><p>Why, so;--being gone,<br />I am a man again.--Pray you, sit still.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />You have displaced the mirth, broke the good meeting,<br />With most admir&#039;d disorder.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Can such things be,<br />And overcome us like a summer&#039;s cloud,<br />Without our special wonder? You make me strange<br />Even to the disposition that I owe,<br />When now I think you can behold such sights,<br />And keep the natural ruby of your cheeks,<br />When mine are blanch&#039;d with fear.</p><p>ROSS.<br />What sights, my lord?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />I pray you, speak not; he grows worse and worse;<br />Question enrages him: at once, good-night:--<br />Stand not upon the order of your going,<br />But go at once.</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Good-night; and better health<br />Attend his majesty!</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />A kind good-night to all!</p><p>(Exeunt all Lords and Atendants.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />It will have blood; they say, blood will have blood:<br />Stones have been known to move, and trees to speak;<br />Augurs, and understood relations, have<br />By magot-pies, and choughs, and rooks, brought forth<br />The secret&#039;st man of blood.--What is the night?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Almost at odds with morning, which is which.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />How say&#039;st thou, that Macduff denies his person<br />At our great bidding?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Did you send to him, sir?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I hear it by the way; but I will send:<br />There&#039;s not a one of them but in his house<br />I keep a servant fee&#039;d. I will to-morrow,<br />(And betimes I will) to the weird sisters:<br />More shall they speak; for now I am bent to know,<br />By the worst means, the worst. For mine own good,<br />All causes shall give way: I am in blood<br />Step&#039;t in so far that, should I wade no more,<br />Returning were as tedious as go o&#039;er:<br />Strange things I have in head, that will to hand;<br />Which must be acted ere they may be scann&#039;d.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />You lack the season of all natures, sleep.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Come, we&#039;ll to sleep. My strange and self-abuse<br />Is the initiate fear that wants hard use:--<br />We are yet but young in deed.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE V. The heath.</p><p>(Thunder. Enter the three Witches, meeting Hecate.)</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Why, how now, Hecate? you look angerly.</p><p>HECATE.<br />Have I not reason, beldams as you are,<br />Saucy and overbold? How did you dare<br />To trade and traffic with Macbeth<br />In riddles and affairs of death;<br />And I, the mistress of your charms,<br />The close contriver of all harms,<br />Was never call&#039;d to bear my part,<br />Or show the glory of our art?<br />And, which is worse, all you have done<br />Hath been but for a wayward son,<br />Spiteful and wrathful; who, as others do,<br />Loves for his own ends, not for you.<br />But make amends now: get you gone,<br />And at the pit of Acheron<br />Meet me i&#039; the morning: thither he<br />Will come to know his destiny.<br />Your vessels and your spells provide,<br />Your charms, and everything beside.<br />I am for the air; this night I&#039;ll spend<br />Unto a dismal and a fatal end.<br />Great business must be wrought ere noon:<br />Upon the corner of the moon<br />There hangs a vaporous drop profound;<br />I&#039;ll catch it ere it come to ground:<br />And that, distill&#039;d by magic sleights,<br />Shall raise such artificial sprites,<br />As, by the strength of their illusion,<br />Shall draw him on to his confusion:<br />He shall spurn fate, scorn death, and bear<br />His hopes &#039;bove wisdom, grace, and fear:<br />And you all know, security<br />Is mortals&#039; chiefest enemy.</p><p>(Music and song within, &quot;Come away, come away&quot; &amp;c.)</p><p>Hark! I am call&#039;d; my little spirit, see,<br />Sits in a foggy cloud and stays for me.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Come, let&#039;s make haste; she&#039;ll soon be back again.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE VI. Forres. A Room in the Palace.</p><p>(Enter Lennox and another Lord.)</p><p>LENNOX.<br />My former speeches have but hit your thoughts,<br />Which can interpret further: only, I say,<br />Thing&#039;s have been strangely borne. The gracious Duncan<br />Was pitied of Macbeth:--marry, he was dead:--<br />And the right valiant Banquo walk&#039;d too late;<br />Whom, you may say, if&#039;t please you, Fleance kill&#039;d,<br />For Fleance fled. Men must not walk too late.<br />Who cannot want the thought, how monstrous<br />It was for Malcolm and for Donalbain<br />To kill their gracious father? damned fact!<br />How it did grieve Macbeth! did he not straight,<br />In pious rage, the two delinquents tear<br />That were the slaves of drink and thralls of sleep?<br />Was not that nobly done? Ay, and wisely too;<br />For &#039;twould have anger&#039;d any heart alive,<br />To hear the men deny&#039;t. So that, I say,<br />He has borne all things well: and I do think,<br />That had he Duncan&#039;s sons under his key,--<br />As, an&#039;t please heaven, he shall not,--they should find<br />What &#039;twere to kill a father; so should Fleance.<br />But, peace!--for from broad words, and &#039;cause he fail&#039;d<br />His presence at the tyrant&#039;s feast, I hear,<br />Macduff lives in disgrace. Sir, can you tell<br />Where he bestows himself?</p><p>LORD.<br />The son of Duncan,<br />From whom this tyrant holds the due of birth,<br />Lives in the English court and is receiv&#039;d<br />Of the most pious Edward with such grace<br />That the malevolence of fortune nothing<br />Takes from his high respect: thither Macduff<br />Is gone to pray the holy king, upon his aid<br />To wake Northumberland, and warlike Siward:<br />That, by the help of these,--with Him above<br />To ratify the work,--we may again<br />Give to our tables meat, sleep to our nights;<br />Free from our feasts and banquets bloody knives;<br />Do faithful homage, and receive free honours,--<br />All which we pine for now: and this report<br />Hath so exasperate the king that he<br />Prepares for some attempt of war.</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Sent he to Macduff?</p><p>LORD.<br />He did: and with an absolute &quot;Sir, not I,&quot;<br />The cloudy messenger turns me his back,<br />And hums, as who should say, &quot;You&#039;ll rue the time<br />That clogs me with this answer.&quot;</p><p>LENNOX.<br />And that well might<br />Advise him to a caution, to hold what distance<br />His wisdom can provide. Some holy angel<br />Fly to the court of England, and unfold<br />His message ere he come; that a swift blessing<br />May soon return to this our suffering country<br />Under a hand accurs&#039;d!</p><p>LORD.<br />I&#039;ll send my prayers with him.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>ACT IV.</p><p>SCENE I. A dark Cave. In the middle, a Caldron Boiling.</p><p>(Thunder. Enter the three Witches.)</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Thrice the brinded cat hath mew&#039;d.</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Thrice; and once the hedge-pig whin&#039;d.</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />Harpier cries:--&quot;tis time, &#039;tis time.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Round about the caldron go;<br />In the poison&#039;d entrails throw.--<br />Toad, that under cold stone,<br />Days and nights has thirty-one<br />Swelter&#039;d venom sleeping got,<br />Boil thou first i&#039; the charmed pot!</p><p>ALL.<br />Double, double, toil and trouble;<br />Fire, burn; and caldron, bubble.</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Fillet of a fenny snake,<br />In the caldron boil and bake;<br />Eye of newt, and toe of frog,<br />Wool of bat, and tongue of dog,<br />Adder&#039;s fork, and blind-worm&#039;s sting,<br />Lizard&#039;s leg, and howlet&#039;s wing,--<br />For a charm of powerful trouble,<br />Like a hell-broth boil and bubble.</p><p>ALL.<br />Double, double, toil and trouble;<br />Fire, burn; and caldron, bubble.</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />Scale of dragon, tooth of wolf,<br />Witch&#039;s mummy, maw and gulf<br />Of the ravin&#039;d salt-sea shark,<br />Root of hemlock digg&#039;d i&#039; the dark,<br />Liver of blaspheming Jew,<br />Gall of goat, and slips of yew<br />Sliver&#039;d in the moon&#039;s eclipse,<br />Nose of Turk, and Tartar&#039;s lips,<br />Finger of birth-strangl&#039;d babe<br />Ditch-deliver&#039;d by a drab,--<br />Make the gruel thick and slab:<br />Add thereto a tiger&#039;s chaudron,<br />For the ingredients of our caldron.</p><p>ALL.<br />Double, double, toil and trouble;<br />Fire, burn; and caldron, bubble.</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Cool it with a baboon&#039;s blood,<br />Then the charm is firm and good.</p><p>(Enter Hecate.)</p><p>HECATE.<br />O, well done! I commend your pains;<br />And everyone shall share i&#039; the gains.<br />And now about the cauldron sing,<br />Like elves and fairies in a ring,<br />Enchanting all that you put in.</p><p>Song.<br />Black spirits and white, red spirits and gray;<br />Mingle, mingle, mingle, you that mingle may.</p><p>(Exit Hecate.)</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />By the pricking of my thumbs,<br />Something wicked this way comes:--<br />Open, locks, whoever knocks!</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[Giperion]]></name>
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			</author>
			<updated>2016-07-28T22:42:40Z</updated>
			<id>http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1228#p1228</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: MACBETH by William Shakespeare]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1227#p1227" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>(Alarum-bell rings.)</p><p>(Re-enter Lady Macbeth.)</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />What&#039;s the business,<br />That such a hideous trumpet calls to parley<br />The sleepers of the house? speak, speak!</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />O gentle lady,<br />&#039;Tis not for you to hear what I can speak:<br />The repetition, in a woman&#039;s ear,<br />Would murder as it fell.</p><p>(Re-enter Banquo.)</p><p>O Banquo, Banquo!<br />Our royal master&#039;s murder&#039;d!</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Woe, alas!<br />What, in our house?</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Too cruel any where.--<br />Dear Duff, I pr&#039;ythee, contradict thyself,<br />And say it is not so.</p><p>(Re-enter Macbeth and Lennox, with Ross.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Had I but died an hour before this chance,<br />I had liv&#039;d a blessed time; for, from this instant<br />There&#039;s nothing serious in mortality:<br />All is but toys: renown and grace is dead;<br />The wine of life is drawn, and the mere lees<br />Is left this vault to brag of.</p><p>(Enter Malcolm and Donalbain.)</p><p>DONALBAIN.<br />What is amiss?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />You are, and do not know&#039;t:<br />The spring, the head, the fountain of your blood<br />Is stopp&#039;d; the very source of it is stopp&#039;d.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Your royal father&#039;s murder&#039;d.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />O, by whom?</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Those of his chamber, as it seem&#039;d, had done&#039;t:<br />Their hands and faces were all badg&#039;d with blood;<br />So were their daggers, which, unwip&#039;d, we found<br />Upon their pillows:<br />They star&#039;d, and were distracted; no man&#039;s life<br />Was to be trusted with them.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />O, yet I do repent me of my fury,<br />That I did kill them.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Wherefore did you so?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Who can be wise, amaz&#039;d, temperate, and furious,<br />Loyal and neutral, in a moment? No man:<br />The expedition of my violent love<br />Outrun the pauser reason. Here lay Duncan,<br />His silver skin lac&#039;d with his golden blood;<br />And his gash&#039;d stabs look&#039;d like a breach in nature<br />For ruin&#039;s wasteful entrance: there, the murderers,<br />Steep&#039;d in the colours of their trade, their daggers<br />Unmannerly breech&#039;d with gore: who could refrain,<br />That had a heart to love, and in that heart<br />Courage to make&#039;s love known?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Help me hence, ho!</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Look to the lady.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Why do we hold our tongues,<br />That most may claim this argument for ours?</p><p>DONALBAIN.<br />What should be spoken here, where our fate,<br />Hid in an auger hole, may rush, and seize us?<br />Let&#039;s away;<br />Our tears are not yet brew&#039;d.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />Nor our strong sorrow<br />Upon the foot of motion.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Look to the lady:--</p><p>(Lady Macbeth is carried out.)</p><p>And when we have our naked frailties hid,<br />That suffer in exposure, let us meet,<br />And question this most bloody piece of work<br />To know it further. Fears and scruples shake us:<br />In the great hand of God I stand; and thence,<br />Against the undivulg&#039;d pretense I fight<br />Of treasonous malice.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />And so do I.</p><p>ALL.<br />So all.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Let&#039;s briefly put on manly readiness,<br />And meet i&#039; the hall together.</p><p>ALL.<br />Well contented.</p><p>(Exeunt all but Malcolm and Donalbain.)</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />What will you do? Let&#039;s not consort with them:<br />To show an unfelt sorrow is an office<br />Which the false man does easy. I&#039;ll to England.</p><p>DONALBAIN.<br />To Ireland, I; our separated fortune<br />Shall keep us both the safer: where we are,<br />There&#039;s daggers in men&#039;s smiles: the near in blood,<br />The nearer bloody.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />This murderous shaft that&#039;s shot<br />Hath not yet lighted; and our safest way<br />Is to avoid the aim. Therefore to horse;<br />And let us not be dainty of leave-taking,<br />But shift away: there&#039;s warrant in that theft<br />Which steals itself, when there&#039;s no mercy left.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE II. The same. Without the Castle.</p><p>(Enter Ross and an old Man.)</p><p>OLD MAN.<br />Threescore and ten I can remember well:<br />Within the volume of which time I have seen<br />Hours dreadful and things strange; but this sore night<br />Hath trifled former knowings.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Ah, good father,<br />Thou seest, the heavens, as troubled with man&#039;s act,<br />Threaten his bloody stage: by the clock &#039;tis day,<br />And yet dark night strangles the travelling lamp;<br />Is&#039;t night&#039;s predominance, or the day&#039;s shame,<br />That darkness does the face of earth entomb,<br />When living light should kiss it?</p><p>OLD MAN.<br />&#039;Tis unnatural,<br />Even like the deed that&#039;s done. On Tuesday last,<br />A falcon, towering in her pride of place,<br />Was by a mousing owl hawk&#039;d at and kill&#039;d.</p><p>ROSS.<br />And Duncan&#039;s horses,--a thing most strange and certain,--<br />Beauteous and swift, the minions of their race,<br />Turn&#039;d wild in nature, broke their stalls, flung out,<br />Contending &#039;gainst obedience, as they would make<br />War with mankind.</p><p>OLD MAN.<br />&#039;Tis said they eat each other.</p><p>ROSS.<br />They did so; to the amazement of mine eyes,<br />That look&#039;d upon&#039;t.<br />Here comes the good Macduff.</p><p>(Enter Macduff.)</p><p>How goes the world, sir, now?</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Why, see you not?</p><p>ROSS.<br />Is&#039;t known who did this more than bloody deed?</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Those that Macbeth hath slain.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Alas, the day!<br />What good could they pretend?</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />They were suborn&#039;d:<br />Malcolm and Donalbain, the king&#039;s two sons,<br />Are stol&#039;n away and fled; which puts upon them<br />Suspicion of the deed.</p><p>ROSS.<br />&#039;Gainst nature still:<br />Thriftless ambition, that wilt ravin up<br />Thine own life&#039;s means!--Then &#039;tis most like,<br />The sovereignty will fall upon Macbeth.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />He is already nam&#039;d; and gone to Scone<br />To be invested.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Where is Duncan&#039;s body?</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Carried to Colme-kill,<br />The sacred storehouse of his predecessors,<br />And guardian of their bones.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Will you to Scone?</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />No, cousin, I&#039;ll to Fife.</p><p>ROSS.<br />Well, I will thither.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Well, may you see things well done there,--adieu!--<br />Lest our old robes sit easier than our new!</p><p>ROSS.<br />Farewell, father.</p><p>OLD MAN.<br />God&#039;s benison go with you; and with those<br />That would make good of bad, and friends of foes!</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>ACT III.</p><p>SCENE I. Forres. A Room in the Palace.</p><p>(Enter Banquo.)</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Thou hast it now,--king, Cawdor, Glamis, all,<br />As the weird women promis&#039;d; and, I fear,<br />Thou play&#039;dst most foully for&#039;t; yet it was said<br />It should not stand in thy posterity;<br />But that myself should be the root and father<br />Of many kings. If there come truth from them,--<br />As upon thee, Macbeth, their speeches shine,--<br />Why, by the verities on thee made good,<br />May they not be my oracles as well,<br />And set me up in hope? But hush; no more.</p><p>(Sennet sounded. Enter Macbeth as King, Lady Macbeth<br />as Queen; Lennox, Ross, Lords, Ladies, and Attendants.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Here&#039;s our chief guest.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />If he had been forgotten,<br />It had been as a gap in our great feast,<br />And all-thing unbecoming.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />To-night we hold a solemn supper, sir,<br />And I&#039;ll request your presence.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Let your highness<br />Command upon me; to the which my duties<br />Are with a most indissoluble tie<br />For ever knit.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Ride you this afternoon?</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Ay, my good lord.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />We should have else desir&#039;d your good advice,--<br />Which still hath been both grave and prosperous,--<br />In this day&#039;s council; but we&#039;ll take to-morrow.<br />Is&#039;t far you ride?</p><p>BANQUO.<br />As far, my lord, as will fill up the time<br />&#039;Twixt this and supper: go not my horse the better,<br />I must become a borrower of the night,<br />For a dark hour or twain.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Fail not our feast.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />My lord, I will not.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />We hear our bloody cousins are bestow&#039;d<br />In England and in Ireland; not confessing<br />Their cruel parricide, filling their hearers<br />With strange invention: but of that to-morrow;<br />When therewithal we shall have cause of state<br />Craving us jointly. Hie you to horse: adieu,<br />Till you return at night. Goes Fleance with you?</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Ay, my good lord: our time does call upon&#039;s.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I wish your horses swift and sure of foot;<br />And so I do commend you to their backs.<br />Farewell.--</p><p>(Exit&nbsp; Banquo.)</p><p>Let every man be master of his time<br />Till seven at night; to make society<br />The sweeter welcome, we will keep ourself<br />Till supper time alone: while then, God be with you!</p><p>(Exeunt Lady Macbeth, Lords, Ladies, &amp;c.)</p><p>Sirrah, a word with you: attend those men<br />Our pleasure?</p><p>ATTENDANT.<br />They are, my lord, without the palace gate.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Bring them before us.</p><p>(Exit Attendant.)</p><p>To be thus is nothing;<br />But to be safely thus:--our fears in Banquo.<br />Stick deep; and in his royalty of nature<br />Reigns that which would be fear&#039;d: &#039;tis much he dares;<br />And, to that dauntless temper of his mind,<br />He hath a wisdom that doth guide his valour<br />To act in safety. There is none but he<br />Whose being I do fear: and under him,<br />My genius is rebuk&#039;d; as, it is said,<br />Mark Antony&#039;s was by Caesar. He chid the sisters<br />When first they put the name of king upon me,<br />And bade them speak to him; then, prophet-like,<br />They hail&#039;d him father to a line of kings:<br />Upon my head they plac&#039;d a fruitless crown,<br />And put a barren sceptre in my gripe,<br />Thence to be wrench&#039;d with an unlineal hand,<br />No son of mine succeeding. If&#039;t be so,<br />For Banquo&#039;s issue have I fil&#039;d my mind;<br />For them the gracious Duncan have I murder&#039;d;<br />Put rancours in the vessel of my peace<br />Only for them; and mine eternal jewel<br />Given to the common enemy of man,<br />To make them kings, the seed of Banquo kings!<br />Rather than so, come, fate, into the list,<br />And champion me to the utterance!--Who&#039;s there?--</p><p>(Re-enter Attendant, with two Murderers.)</p><p>Now go to the door, and stay there till we call.</p><p>(Exit Attendant.)</p><p>Was it not yesterday we spoke together?</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />It was, so please your highness.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Well then, now<br />Have you consider&#039;d of my speeches? Know<br />That it was he, in the times past, which held you<br />So under fortune; which you thought had been<br />Our innocent self: this I made good to you<br />In our last conference, pass&#039;d in probation with you<br />How you were borne in hand, how cross&#039;d, the instruments,<br />Who wrought with them, and all things else that might<br />To half a soul and to a notion craz&#039;d<br />Say, &quot;Thus did Banquo.&quot;</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />You made it known to us.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I did so; and went further, which is now<br />Our point of second meeting. Do you find<br />Your patience so predominant in your nature,<br />That you can let this go? Are you so gospell&#039;d,<br />To pray for this good man and for his issue,<br />Whose heavy hand hath bow&#039;d you to the grave,<br />And beggar&#039;d yours forever?</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />We are men, my liege.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Ay, in the catalogue ye go for men;<br />As hounds, and greyhounds, mongrels, spaniels, curs,<br />Shoughs, water-rugs, and demi-wolves are clept<br />All by the name of dogs: the valu&#039;d file<br />Distinguishes the swift, the slow, the subtle,<br />The house-keeper, the hunter, every one<br />According to the gift which bounteous nature<br />Hath in him clos&#039;d; whereby he does receive<br />Particular addition, from the bill<br />That writes them all alike: and so of men.<br />Now, if you have a station in the file,<br />Not i&#039; the worst rank of manhood, say it;<br />And I will put that business in your bosoms,<br />Whose execution takes your enemy off;<br />Grapples you to the heart and love of us,<br />Who wear our health but sickly in his life,<br />Which in his death were perfect.</p><p>SECOND MURDERER.<br />I am one, my liege,<br />Whom the vile blows and buffets of the world<br />Have so incens&#039;d that I am reckless what<br />I do to spite the world.</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />And I another,<br />So weary with disasters, tugg&#039;d with fortune,<br />That I would set my life on any chance,<br />To mend it or be rid on&#039;t.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Both of you<br />Know Banquo was your enemy.</p><p>BOTH MURDERERS.<br />True, my lord.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />So is he mine; and in such bloody distance,<br />That every minute of his being thrusts<br />Against my near&#039;st of life; and though I could<br />With barefac&#039;d power sweep him from my sight,<br />And bid my will avouch it, yet I must not,<br />For certain friends that are both his and mine,<br />Whose loves I may not drop, but wail his fall<br />Who I myself struck down: and thence it is<br />That I to your assistance do make love;<br />Masking the business from the common eye<br />For sundry weighty reasons.</p><p>SECOND MURDERER.<br />We shall, my lord,<br />Perform what you command us.</p><p>FIRST MURDERER.<br />Though our lives--</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Your spirits shine through you. Within this hour at most,<br />I will advise you where to plant yourselves;<br />Acquaint you with the perfect spy o&#039; the time,<br />The moment on&#039;t; for&#039;t must be done to-night<br />And something from the palace; always thought<br />That I require a clearness; and with him,--<br />To leave no rubs nor botches in the work,--<br />Fleance his son, that keeps him company,<br />Whose absence is no less material to me<br />Than is his father&#039;s, must embrace the fate<br />Of that dark hour. Resolve yourselves apart:<br />I&#039;ll come to you anon.</p><p>BOTH MURDERERS.<br />We are resolv&#039;d, my lord.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I&#039;ll call upon you straight: abide within.</p><p>(Exeunt Murderers.)</p><p>It is concluded:--Banquo, thy soul&#039;s flight,<br />If it find heaven, must find it out to-night.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><br /><p>SCENE II. The same. Another Room in the Palace.</p><p>(Enter Lady Macbeth and a Servant.)</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Is Banquo gone from court?</p><p>SERVANT.<br />Ay, madam, but returns again to-night.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Say to the king, I would attend his leisure<br />For a few words.</p><p>SERVANT.<br />Madam, I will.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Naught&#039;s had, all&#039;s spent,<br />Where our desire is got without content:<br />&#039;Tis safer to be that which we destroy,<br />Than, by destruction, dwell in doubtful joy.</p><p>(Enter Macbeth.)</p><p>How now, my lord! why do you keep alone,<br />Of sorriest fancies your companions making;<br />Using those thoughts which should indeed have died<br />With them they think on? Things without all remedy<br />Should be without regard: what&#039;s done is done.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />We have scotch&#039;d the snake, not kill&#039;d it;<br />She&#039;ll close, and be herself; whilst our poor malice<br />Remains in danger of her former tooth.<br />But let the frame of things disjoint,<br />Both the worlds suffer,<br />Ere we will eat our meal in fear, and sleep<br />In the affliction of these terrible dreams<br />That shake us nightly: better be with the dead,<br />Whom we, to gain our peace, have sent to peace,<br />Than on the torture of the mind to lie<br />In restless ecstasy. Duncan is in his grave;<br />After life&#039;s fitful fever he sleeps well;<br />Treason has done his worst: nor steel, nor poison,<br />Malice domestic, foreign levy, nothing,<br />Can touch him further.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Come on;<br />Gently my lord, sleek o&#039;er your rugged looks;<br />Be bright and jovial &#039;mong your guests to-night.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />So shall I, love; and so, I pray, be you:<br />Let your remembrance apply to Banquo;<br />Present him eminence, both with eye and tongue:<br />Unsafe the while, that we<br />Must lave our honors in these flattering streams;<br />And make our faces vizards to our hearts,<br />Disguising what they are.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />You must leave this.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />O, full of scorpions is my mind, dear wife!<br />Thou know&#039;st that Banquo, and his Fleance, lives.</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[Giperion]]></name>
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			</author>
			<updated>2016-07-28T22:42:14Z</updated>
			<id>http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1227#p1227</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: MACBETH by William Shakespeare]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1226#p1226" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Who dares receive it other,<br />As we shall make our griefs and clamor roar<br />Upon his death?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I am settled, and bend up<br />Each corporal agent to this terrible feat.<br />Away, and mock the time with fairest show:<br />False face must hide what the false heart doth know.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>ACT II.</p><p>SCENE I. Inverness. Court within the Castle.</p><p>(Enter Banquo, preceeded by Fleance with a torch.)</p><p>BANQUO.<br />How goes the night, boy?</p><p>FLEANCE.<br />The moon is down; I have not heard the clock.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />And she goes down at twelve.</p><p>FLEANCE.<br />I take&#039;t, &#039;tis later, sir.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Hold, take my sword.--There&#039;s husbandry in heaven;<br />Their candles are all out:--take thee that too.--<br />A heavy summons lies like lead upon me,<br />And yet I would not sleep:--merciful powers,<br />Restrain in me the cursed thoughts that nature<br />Gives way to in repose!--Give me my sword.<br />Who&#039;s there?</p><p>(Enter Macbeth, and a Servant with a torch.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />A friend.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />What, sir, not yet at rest? The king&#039;s a-bed:<br />He hath been in unusual pleasure and<br />Sent forth great largess to your officers:<br />This diamond he greets your wife withal,<br />By the name of most kind hostess; and shut up<br />In measureless content.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Being unprepar&#039;d,<br />Our will became the servant to defect;<br />Which else should free have wrought.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />All&#039;s well.<br />I dreamt last night of the three weird sisters:<br />To you they have show&#039;d some truth.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I think not of them:<br />Yet, when we can entreat an hour to serve,<br />We would spend it in some words upon that business,<br />If you would grant the time.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />At your kind&#039;st leisure.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />If you shall cleave to my consent,--when &#039;tis,<br />It shall make honor for you.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />So I lose none<br />In seeking to augment it, but still keep<br />My bosom franchis&#039;d, and allegiance clear,<br />I shall be counsell&#039;d.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Good repose the while!</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Thanks, sir: the like to you!</p><p>(Exeunt Banquo and Fleance.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Go bid thy mistress, when my drink is ready,<br />She strike upon the bell. Get thee to bed.</p><p>(Exit Servant.)</p><p>Is this a dagger which I see before me,<br />The handle toward my hand? Come, let me clutch thee:--<br />I have thee not, and yet I see thee still.<br />Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible<br />To feeling as to sight? or art thou but<br />A dagger of the mind, a false creation,<br />Proceeding from the heat-oppressed brain?<br />I see thee yet, in form as palpable<br />As this which now I draw.<br />Thou marshall&#039;st me the way that I was going;<br />And such an instrument I was to use.<br />Mine eyes are made the fools o&#039; the other senses,<br />Or else worth all the rest: I see thee still;<br />And on thy blade and dudgeon gouts of blood,<br />Which was not so before.--There&#039;s no such thing:<br />It is the bloody business which informs<br />Thus to mine eyes.--Now o&#039;er the one half-world<br />Nature seems dead, and wicked dreams abuse<br />The curtain&#039;d sleep; now witchcraft celebrates<br />Pale Hecate&#039;s offerings; and wither&#039;d murder,<br />Alarum&#039;d by his sentinel, the wolf,<br />Whose howl&#039;s his watch, thus with his stealthy pace,<br />With Tarquin&#039;s ravishing strides, towards his design<br />Moves like a ghost.--Thou sure and firm-set earth,<br />Hear not my steps, which way they walk, for fear<br />Thy very stones prate of my whereabout,<br />And take the present horror from the time,<br />Which now suits with it.--Whiles I threat, he lives;<br />Words to the heat of deeds too cold breath gives.</p><p>(A bell rings.)</p><p>I go, and it is done; the bell invites me.<br />Hear it not, Duncan, for it is a knell<br />That summons thee to heaven or to hell.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><p>(Enter Lady Macbeth.)</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />That which hath made them drunk hath made me bold:<br />What hath quench&#039;d them hath given me fire.--Hark!--Peace!<br />It was the owl that shriek&#039;d, the fatal bellman,<br />Which gives the stern&#039;st good night. He is about it:<br />The doors are open; and the surfeited grooms<br />Do mock their charge with snores: I have drugg&#039;d their possets<br />That death and nature do contend about them,<br />Whether they live or die.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />(Within.) Who&#039;s there?--what, ho!</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Alack! I am afraid they have awak&#039;d,<br />And &#039;tis not done: the attempt, and not the deed,<br />Confounds us.--Hark!--I laid their daggers ready;<br />He could not miss &#039;em.--Had he not resembled<br />My father as he slept, I had done&#039;t.--My husband!</p><p>(Re-enter Macbeth.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I have done the deed.--Didst thou not hear a noise?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />I heard the owl scream and the crickets cry.<br />Did not you speak?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />When?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Now.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />As I descended?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Ay.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Hark!--<br />Who lies i&#039; the second chamber?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Donalbain.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />This is a sorry sight.</p><p>(Looking on his hands.)</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />A foolish thought, to say a sorry sight.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />There&#039;s one did laugh in&#039;s sleep, and one cried, &quot;Murder!&quot;<br />That they did wake each other: I stood and heard them:<br />But they did say their prayers, and address&#039;d them<br />Again to sleep.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />There are two lodg&#039;d together.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />One cried, &quot;God bless us!&quot; and, &quot;Amen,&quot; the other;<br />As they had seen me with these hangman&#039;s hands.<br />Listening their fear, I could not say &quot;Amen,&quot;<br />When they did say, &quot;God bless us.&quot;</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Consider it not so deeply.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />But wherefore could not I pronounce &quot;Amen&quot;?<br />I had most need of blessing, and &quot;Amen&quot;<br />Stuck in my throat.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />These deeds must not be thought<br />After these ways; so, it will make us mad.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I heard a voice cry, &quot;Sleep no more!<br />Macbeth does murder sleep,&quot;--the innocent sleep;<br />Sleep that knits up the ravell&#039;d sleave of care,<br />The death of each day&#039;s life, sore labour&#039;s bath,<br />Balm of hurt minds, great nature&#039;s second course,<br />Chief nourisher in life&#039;s feast.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />What do you mean?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Still it cried, &quot;Sleep no more!&quot; to all the house:<br />&quot;Glamis hath murder&#039;d sleep, and therefore Cawdor<br />Shall sleep no more,--Macbeth shall sleep no more!&quot;</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Who was it that thus cried? Why, worthy thane,<br />You do unbend your noble strength to think<br />So brainsickly of things.--Go get some water,<br />And wash this filthy witness from your hand.--<br />Why did you bring these daggers from the place?<br />They must lie there: go carry them; and smear<br />The sleepy grooms with blood.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I&#039;ll go no more:<br />I am afraid to think what I have done;<br />Look on&#039;t again I dare not.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Infirm of purpose!<br />Give me the daggers: the sleeping and the dead<br />Are but as pictures: &#039;tis the eye of childhood<br />That fears a painted devil. If he do bleed,<br />I&#039;ll gild the faces of the grooms withal,<br />For it must seem their guilt.</p><p>(Exit. Knocking within.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Whence is that knocking?<br />How is&#039;t with me, when every noise appals me?<br />What hands are here? Ha, they pluck out mine eyes!<br />Will all great Neptune&#039;s ocean wash this blood<br />Clean from my hand? No; this my hand will rather<br />The multitudinous seas incarnadine,<br />Making the green one red.</p><p>(Re-enter Lady Macbeth.)</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />My hands are of your color, but I shame<br />To wear a heart so white. (Knocking within.) I hear knocking<br />At the south entry:--retire we to our chamber.<br />A little water clears us of this deed:<br />How easy is it then! Your constancy<br />Hath left you unattended.--(Knocking within.) Hark, more<br />knocking:<br />Get on your nightgown, lest occasion call us<br />And show us to be watchers:--be not lost<br />So poorly in your thoughts.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />To know my deed, &#039;twere best not know myself. (Knocking within.)<br />Wake Duncan with thy knocking! I would thou couldst!</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><p>(Enter a Porter. Knocking within.)</p><p>PORTER.<br />Here&#039;s a knocking indeed! If a man were porter of hell-gate, he<br />should have old turning the key. (Knocking.) Knock, knock, knock.<br />Who&#039;s there, i&#039; the name of Belzebub? Here&#039;s a farmer that hanged<br />himself on the expectation of plenty: come in time; have napkins<br />enow about you; here you&#039;ll sweat for&#039;t.--(Knocking.) Knock,<br />knock! Who&#039;s there, in the other devil&#039;s name? Faith, here&#039;s an<br />equivocator, that could swear in both the scales against either<br />scale, who committed treason enough for God&#039;s sake, yet could not<br />equivocate to heaven: O, come in, equivocator. (Knocking.) Knock,<br />knock, knock! Who&#039;s there? Faith, here&#039;s an English tailor come<br />hither, for stealing out of a French hose: come in, tailor; here<br />you may roast your goose.-- (Knocking.) Knock, knock: never at<br />quiet! What are you?--But this place is too cold for hell.<br />I&#039;ll devil-porter it no further: I had thought to have let in<br />some of all professions, that go the primrose way to the<br />everlasting bonfire. (Knocking.) Anon, anon! I pray you, remember<br />the porter.</p><p>(Opens the gate.)</p><p>(Enter Macduff and Lennox.)</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Was it so late, friend, ere you went to bed,<br />That you do lie so late?</p><p>PORTER.<br />Faith, sir, we were carousing till the second cock: and<br />drink, sir, is a great provoker of three things.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />What three things does drink especially provoke?</p><p>PORTER.<br />Marry, sir, nose-painting, sleep, and urine. Lechery, sir,<br />it provokes and unprovokes; it provokes the desire, but it<br />takes away the performance: therefore much drink may be said to<br />be an equivocator with lechery: it makes him, and it mars him; it<br />sets him on, and it takes him off; it persuades him, and<br />disheartens him; makes him stand to, and not stand to: in<br />conclusion, equivocates him in a sleep, and giving him the lie,<br />leaves him.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />I believe drink gave thee the lie last night.</p><p>PORTER.<br />That it did, sir, i&#039; the very throat o&#039; me; but I requited<br />him for his lie; and, I think, being too strong for him,<br />though he took up my legs sometime, yet I made a shift to cast<br />him.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Is thy master stirring?--<br />Our knocking has awak&#039;d him; here he comes.</p><p>(Enter Macbeth.)</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Good morrow, noble sir!</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Good morrow, both!</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Is the king stirring, worthy thane?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Not yet.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />He did command me to call timely on him:<br />I have almost slipp&#039;d the hour.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />I&#039;ll bring you to him.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />I know this is a joyful trouble to you;<br />But yet &#039;tis one.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />The labour we delight in physics pain.<br />This is the door.</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />I&#039;ll make so bold to call.<br />For &#039;tis my limited service.</p><p>(Exit Macduff.)</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Goes the king hence to-day?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />He does: he did appoint so.</p><p>LENNOX.<br />The night has been unruly: where we lay,<br />Our chimneys were blown down: and, as they say,<br />Lamentings heard i&#039; the air, strange screams of death;<br />And prophesying, with accents terrible,<br />Of dire combustion and confus&#039;d events,<br />New hatch&#039;d to the woeful time: the obscure bird<br />Clamour&#039;d the live-long night; some say the earth<br />Was feverous, and did shake.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />&#039;Twas a rough night.</p><p>LENNOX.<br />My young remembrance cannot parallel<br />A fellow to it.</p><p>(Re-enter Macduff.)</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />O horror, horror, horror! Tongue nor heart<br />Cannot conceive nor name thee!</p><p>MACBETH, LENNOX.<br />What&#039;s the matter?</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Confusion now hath made his masterpiece!<br />Most sacrilegious murder hath broke ope<br />The Lord&#039;s anointed temple, and stole thence<br />The life o&#039; the building.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />What is&#039;t you say? the life?</p><p>LENNOX.<br />Mean you his majesty?</p><p>MACDUFF.<br />Approach the chamber, and destroy your sight<br />With a new Gorgon:--do not bid me speak;<br />See, and then speak yourselves.</p><p>(Exeunt Macbeth and Lennox.)</p><p>Awake, awake!--<br />Ring the alarum bell:--murder and treason!<br />Banquo and Donalbain! Malcolm! awake!<br />Shake off this downy sleep, death&#039;s counterfeit,<br />And look on death itself! up, up, and see<br />The great doom&#039;s image! Malcolm! Banquo!<br />As from your graves rise up, and walk like sprites<br />To countenance this horror!</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[Giperion]]></name>
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			<updated>2016-07-28T22:41:50Z</updated>
			<id>http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1226#p1226</id>
		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Re: MACBETH by William Shakespeare]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1225#p1225" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>MACBETH.<br />(Aside.) Two truths are told,<br />As happy prologues to the swelling act<br />Of the imperial theme.--I thank you, gentlemen.--<br />(Aside.) This supernatural soliciting<br />Cannot be ill; cannot be good:--if ill,<br />Why hath it given me earnest of success,<br />Commencing in a truth? I am Thane of Cawdor:<br />If good, why do I yield to that suggestion<br />Whose horrid image doth unfix my hair,<br />And make my seated heart knock at my ribs,<br />Against the use of nature? Present fears<br />Are less than horrible imaginings:<br />My thought, whose murder yet is but fantastical,<br />Shakes so my single state of man, that function<br />Is smother&#039;d in surmise; and nothing is<br />But what is not.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Look, how our partner&#039;s rapt.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />(Aside.) If chance will have me king, why, chance may crown me<br />Without my stir.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />New honors come upon him,<br />Like our strange garments, cleave not to their mould<br />But with the aid of use.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />(Aside.) Come what come may,<br />Time and the hour runs through the roughest day.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Worthy Macbeth, we stay upon your leisure.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Give me your favor:--my dull brain was wrought<br />With things forgotten. Kind gentlemen, your pains<br />Are register&#039;d where every day I turn<br />The leaf to read them.--Let us toward the king.--<br />Think upon what hath chanc&#039;d; and, at more time,<br />The interim having weigh&#039;d it, let us speak<br />Our free hearts each to other.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Very gladly.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Till then, enough.--Come, friends.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE IV. Forres. A Room in the Palace.</p><p>(Flourish. Enter Duncan, Malcolm, Donalbain, Lennox, and<br />Attendants.)</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />Is execution done on Cawdor? Are not<br />Those in commission yet return&#039;d?</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />My liege,<br />They are not yet come back. But I have spoke<br />With one that saw him die: who did report,<br />That very frankly he confess&#039;d his treasons;<br />Implor&#039;d your highness&#039; pardon; and set forth<br />A deep repentance: nothing in his life<br />Became him like the leaving it; he died<br />As one that had been studied in his death,<br />To throw away the dearest thing he ow&#039;d<br />As &#039;twere a careless trifle.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />There&#039;s no art<br />To find the mind&#039;s construction in the face:<br />He was a gentleman on whom I built<br />An absolute trust.--</p><p>(Enter Macbeth, Banquo, Ross, and Angus.)</p><p>O worthiest cousin!<br />The sin of my ingratitude even now<br />Was heavy on me: thou art so far before,<br />That swiftest wing of recompense is slow<br />To overtake thee. Would thou hadst less deserv&#039;d;<br />That the proportion both of thanks and payment<br />Might have been mine! only I have left to say,<br />More is thy due than more than all can pay.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />The service and the loyalty I owe,<br />In doing it, pays itself. Your highness&#039; part<br />Is to receive our duties: and our duties<br />Are to your throne and state, children and servants;<br />Which do but what they should, by doing everything<br />Safe toward your love and honor.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />Welcome hither:<br />I have begun to plant thee, and will labor<br />To make thee full of growing.--Noble Banquo,<br />That hast no less deserv&#039;d, nor must be known<br />No less to have done so,let me infold thee<br />And hold thee to my heart.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />There if I grow,<br />The harvest is your own.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />My plenteous joys,<br />Wanton in fulness, seek to hide themselves<br />In drops of sorrow.--Sons, kinsmen, thanes,<br />And you whose places are the nearest, know,<br />We will establish our estate upon<br />Our eldest, Malcolm; whom we name hereafter<br />The Prince of Cumberland: which honor must<br />Not unaccompanied invest him only,<br />But signs of nobleness, like stars, shall shine<br />On all deservers.--From hence to Inverness,<br />And bind us further to you.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />The rest is labor, which is not us&#039;d for you:<br />I&#039;ll be myself the harbinger, and make joyful<br />The hearing of my wife with your approach;<br />So, humbly take my leave.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />My worthy Cawdor!</p><p>MACBETH.<br />(Aside.) The Prince of Cumberland!--That is a step,<br />On which I must fall down, or else o&#039;erleap,<br />For in my way it lies. Stars, hide your fires!<br />Let not light see my black and deep desires:<br />The eye wink at the hand! yet let that be,<br />Which the eye fears, when it is done, to see.</p><p>(Exit.)</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />True, worthy Banquo!--he is full so valiant;<br />And in his commendations I am fed,--<br />It is a banquet to me. Let us after him,<br />Whose care is gone before to bid us welcome:<br />It is a peerless kinsman.</p><p>(Flourish. Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE V. Inverness. A Room in Macbeth&#039;s Castle.</p><p>(Enter Lady Macbeth, reading a letter.)</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />&quot;They met me in the day of success; and I have<br />learned by the perfectest report they have more in them than<br />mortal knowledge. When I burned in desire to question them<br />further, they made themselves air, into which they vanished.<br />Whiles I stood rapt in the wonder of it, came missives from<br />the king, who all-hailed me, &#039;Thane of Cawdor&#039;; by which title,<br />before, these weird sisters saluted me, and referred me to the<br />coming on of time, with &#039;Hail, king that shalt be!&#039; This have<br />I thought good to deliver thee, my dearest partner of<br />greatness; that thou mightst not lose the dues of rejoicing, by<br />being ignorant of what greatness is promised thee. Lay it to thy<br />heart, and farewell.&quot;</p><p>Glamis thou art, and Cawdor; and shalt be<br />What thou art promis&#039;d; yet do I fear thy nature;<br />It is too full o&#039; the milk of human kindness<br />To catch the nearest way: thou wouldst be great;<br />Art not without ambition; but without<br />The illness should attend it. What thou wouldst highly,<br />That wouldst thou holily; wouldst not play false,<br />And yet wouldst wrongly win: thou&#039;dst have, great Glamis,<br />That which cries, &quot;Thus thou must do, if thou have it:<br />And that which rather thou dost fear to do<br />Than wishest should be undone.&quot; Hie thee hither,<br />That I may pour my spirits in thine ear;<br />And chastise with the valor of my tongue<br />All that impedes thee from the golden round,<br />Which fate and metaphysical aid doth seem<br />To have thee crown&#039;d withal.</p><p>(Enter an Attendant.)</p><p>What is your tidings?</p><p>ATTENDANT.<br />The king comes here tonight.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Thou&#039;rt mad to say it:<br />Is not thy master with him? who, were&#039;t so,<br />Would have inform&#039;d for preparation.</p><p>ATTENDANT.<br />So please you, it is true:--our thane is coming:<br />One of my fellows had the speed of him;<br />Who, almost dead for breath, had scarcely more<br />Than would make up his message.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Give him tending;<br />He brings great news.</p><p>(Exit Attendant.)</p><p>The raven himself is hoarse<br />That croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan<br />Under my battlements. Come, you spirits<br />That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here;<br />And fill me, from the crown to the toe, top-full<br />Of direst cruelty! make thick my blood,<br />Stop up the access and passage to remorse,<br />That no compunctious visitings of nature<br />Shake my fell purpose, nor keep peace between<br />The effect and it! Come to my woman&#039;s breasts,<br />And take my milk for gall, your murdering ministers,<br />Wherever in your sightless substances<br />You wait on nature&#039;s mischief! Come, thick night,<br />And pall thee in the dunnest smoke of hell<br />That my keen knife see not the wound it makes<br />Nor heaven peep through the blanket of the dark<br />To cry, &quot;Hold, hold!&quot;</p><p>(Enter Macbeth.)</p><p>Great Glamis! Worthy Cawdor!<br />Greater than both, by the all-hail hereafter!<br />Thy letters have transported me beyond<br />This ignorant present, and I feel now<br />The future in the instant.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />My dearest love,<br />Duncan comes here tonight.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />And when goes hence?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />To-morrow,--as he purposes.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />O, never<br />Shall sun that morrow see!<br />Your face, my thane, is as a book where men<br />May read strange matters:--to beguile the time,<br />Look like the time; bear welcome in your eye,<br />Your hand, your tongue: look like the innocent flower,<br />But be the serpent under&#039;t. He that&#039;s coming<br />Must be provided for: and you shall put<br />This night&#039;s great business into my despatch;<br />Which shall to all our nights and days to come<br />Give solely sovereign sway and masterdom.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />We will speak further.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Only look up clear;<br />To alter favor ever is to fear:<br />Leave all the rest to me.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE VI. The same. Before the Castle. </p><p>(Hautboys. Servants of Macbeth attending.)</p><p>(Enter Duncan, Malcolm, Donalbain, Banquo, Lennox, Macduff, Ross,<br />Angus, and Attendants.)</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />This castle hath a pleasant seat: the air<br />Nimbly and sweetly recommends itself<br />Unto our gentle senses.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />This guest of summer,<br />The temple-haunting martlet, does approve<br />By his lov&#039;d mansionry, that the heaven&#039;s breath<br />Smells wooingly here: no jutty, frieze, buttress,<br />Nor coigne of vantage, but this bird hath made<br />His pendant bed and procreant cradle:<br />Where they most breed and haunt, I have observ&#039;d<br />The air is delicate.</p><p>(Enter Lady Macbeth.)</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />See, see, our honour&#039;d hostess!--<br />The love that follows us sometime is our trouble,<br />Which still we thank as love. Herein I teach you<br />How you shall bid God ild us for your pains,<br />And thank us for your trouble.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />All our service<br />In every point twice done, and then done double,<br />Were poor and single business to contend<br />Against those honours deep and broad wherewith<br />Your majesty loads our house: for those of old,<br />And the late dignities heap&#039;d up to them,<br />We rest your hermits.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />Where&#039;s the Thane of Cawdor?<br />We cours&#039;d him at the heels, and had a purpose<br />To be his purveyor: but he rides well;<br />And his great love, sharp as his spur, hath holp him<br />To his home before us. Fair and noble hostess,<br />We are your guest tonight.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Your servants ever<br />Have theirs, themselves, and what is theirs, in compt,<br />To make their audit at your highness&#039; pleasure,<br />Still to return your own.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />Give me your hand;<br />Conduct me to mine host: we love him highly,<br />And shall continue our graces towards him.<br />By your leave, hostess.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE VII. The same. A Lobby in the Castle.</p><p>(Hautboys and torches. Enter, and pass over, a Sewer and divers<br />Servants with dishes and service. Then enter Macbeth.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />If it were done when &#039;tis done, then &#039;twere well<br />It were done quickly. If the assassination<br />Could trammel up the consequence, and catch,<br />With his surcease, success; that but this blow<br />Might be the be-all and the end-all--here,<br />But here, upon this bank and shoal of time,--<br />We&#039;d jump the life to come. But in these cases<br />We still have judgement here; that we but teach<br />Bloody instructions, which being taught, return<br />To plague the inventor: this even-handed justice<br />Commends the ingredients of our poison&#039;d chalice<br />To our own lips. He&#039;s here in double trust:<br />First, as I am his kinsman and his subject,<br />Strong both against the deed: then, as his host,<br />Who should against his murderer shut the door,<br />Not bear the knife myself. Besides, this Duncan<br />Hath borne his faculties so meek, hath been<br />So clear in his great office, that his virtues<br />Will plead like angels, trumpet-tongued, against<br />The deep damnation of his taking-off:<br />And pity, like a naked new-born babe,<br />Striding the blast, or heaven&#039;s cherubin, hors&#039;d<br />Upon the sightless couriers of the air,<br />Shall blow the horrid deed in every eye,<br />That tears shall drown the wind.--I have no spur<br />To prick the sides of my intent, but only<br />Vaulting ambition, which o&#039;erleaps itself,<br />And falls on the other.</p><p>(Enter Lady Macbeth.)</p><p>How now! what news?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />He has almost supp&#039;d: why have you left the chamber?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Hath he ask&#039;d for me?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Know you not he has?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />We will proceed no further in this business:<br />He hath honour&#039;d me of late; and I have bought<br />Golden opinions from all sorts of people,<br />Which would be worn now in their newest gloss,<br />Not cast aside so soon.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />Was the hope drunk<br />Wherein you dress&#039;d yourself? hath it slept since?<br />And wakes it now, to look so green and pale<br />At what it did so freely? From this time<br />Such I account thy love. Art thou afeard<br />To be the same in thine own act and valor<br />As thou art in desire? Wouldst thou have that<br />Which thou esteem&#039;st the ornament of life,<br />And live a coward in thine own esteem;<br />Letting &quot;I dare not&quot; wait upon &quot;I would,&quot;<br />Like the poor cat i&#039; the adage?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Pr&#039;ythee, peace!<br />I dare do all that may become a man;<br />Who dares do more is none.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />What beast was&#039;t, then,<br />That made you break this enterprise to me?<br />When you durst do it, then you were a man;<br />And, to be more than what you were, you would<br />Be so much more the man. Nor time nor place<br />Did then adhere, and yet you would make both:<br />They have made themselves, and that their fitness now<br />Does unmake you. I have given suck, and know<br />How tender &#039;tis to love the babe that milks me:<br />I would, while it was smiling in my face,<br />Have pluck&#039;d my nipple from his boneless gums<br />And dash&#039;d the brains out, had I so sworn as you<br />Have done to this.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />If we should fail?</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />We fail!<br />But screw your courage to the sticking-place,<br />And we&#039;ll not fail. When Duncan is asleep,--<br />Whereto the rather shall his day&#039;s hard journey<br />Soundly invite him, his two chamberlains<br />Will I with wine and wassail so convince<br />That memory, the warder of the brain,<br />Shall be a fume, and the receipt of reason<br />A limbec only: when in swinish sleep<br />Their drenched natures lie as in a death,<br />What cannot you and I perform upon<br />The unguarded Duncan? what not put upon<br />His spongy officers; who shall bear the guilt<br />Of our great quell?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Bring forth men-children only;<br />For thy undaunted mettle should compose<br />Nothing but males. Will it not be receiv&#039;d,<br />When we have mark&#039;d with blood those sleepy two<br />Of his own chamber, and us&#039;d their very daggers,<br />That they have don&#039;t?</p>]]></content>
			<author>
				<name><![CDATA[Giperion]]></name>
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			<updated>2016-07-28T22:41:30Z</updated>
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		</entry>
		<entry>
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[MACBETH by William Shakespeare]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" href="http://klassikaknigi.info/lib/viewtopic.php?pid=1224#p1224" />
			<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>MACBETH</p><p>by William Shakespeare</p><p>Persons Represented</p><p>DUNCAN, King of Scotland.<br />MALCOLM, his Son.<br />DONALBAIN, his Son.<br />MACBETH, General in the King&#039;s Army.<br />BANQUO, General in the King&#039;s Army.<br />MACDUFF, Nobleman of Scotland.<br />LENNOX, Nobleman of Scotland.<br />ROSS, Nobleman of Scotland.<br />MENTEITH, Nobleman of Scotland.<br />ANGUS, Nobleman of Scotland.<br />CAITHNESS, Nobleman of Scotland.<br />FLEANCE, Son to Banquo.<br />SIWARD, Earl of Northumberland, General of the English Forces.<br />YOUNG SIWARD, his Son.<br />SEYTON, an Officer attending on Macbeth.<br />BOY, Son to Macduff.<br />An English Doctor. A Scotch Doctor. A Soldier. A Porter. An Old<br />Man.</p><p>LADY MACBETH.<br />LADY MACDUFF.<br />Gentlewoman attending on Lady Macbeth.<br />HECATE,and three Witches.</p><p>Lords, Gentlemen, Officers, Soldiers, Murderers, Attendants,<br /> and Messengers.</p><p>The Ghost of Banquo and several other Apparitions.</p><p>SCENE: In the end of the Fourth Act, in England; through the rest<br />of the Play, in Scotland; and chiefly at Macbeth&#039;s Castle.</p><br /><p>ACT I.</p><p>SCENE I. An open Place. Thunder and Lightning.</p><p>(Enter three Witches.)</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />When shall we three meet again?<br />In thunder, lightning, or in rain?</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />When the hurlyburly&#039;s done,<br />When the battle&#039;s lost and won.</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />That will be ere the set of sun.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Where the place?</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Upon the heath.</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />There to meet with Macbeth.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />I come, Graymalkin!</p><p>ALL.<br />Paddock calls:--anon:--<br />Fair is foul, and foul is fair:<br />Hover through the fog and filthy air.</p><p>(Witches vanish.)</p><br /><p>SCENE II. A Camp near Forres.</p><p>(Alarum within. Enter King Duncan, Malcolm, Donalbain, Lennox,<br />with Attendants, meeting a bleeding Soldier.)</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />What bloody man is that? He can report,<br />As seemeth by his plight, of the revolt<br />The newest state.</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />This is the sergeant<br />Who, like a good and hardy soldier, fought<br />&#039;Gainst my captivity.--Hail, brave friend!<br />Say to the king the knowledge of the broil<br />As thou didst leave it.</p><p>SOLDIER.<br />Doubtful it stood;<br />As two spent swimmers that do cling together<br />And choke their art. The merciless Macdonwald,--<br />Worthy to be a rebel,--for to that<br />The multiplying villainies of nature<br />Do swarm upon him,--from the Western isles<br />Of kerns and gallowglasses is supplied;<br />And fortune, on his damned quarrel smiling,<br />Show&#039;d like a rebel&#039;s whore. But all&#039;s too weak;<br />For brave Macbeth,--well he deserves that name,--<br />Disdaining fortune, with his brandish&#039;d steel,<br />Which smok&#039;d with bloody execution,<br />Like valor&#039;s minion,<br />Carv&#039;d out his passag tTill he fac&#039;d the slave;<br />And ne&#039;er shook hands, nor bade farewell to him,<br />Till he unseam&#039;d him from the nave to the chaps,<br />And fix&#039;d his head upon our battlements.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />O valiant cousin! worthy gentleman!</p><p>SOLDIER.<br />As whence the sun &#039;gins his reflection<br />Shipwrecking storms and direful thunders break;<br />So from that spring, whence comfort seem&#039;d to come<br />Discomfort swells. Mark, King of Scotland, mark:<br />No sooner justice had, with valor arm&#039;d,<br />Compell&#039;d these skipping kerns to trust their heels,<br />But the Norweyan lord, surveying vantage,<br />With furbish&#039;d arms and new supplies of men,<br />Began a fresh assault.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />Dismay&#039;d not this<br />Our captains, Macbeth and Banquo?</p><p>SOLDIER.<br />Yes;<br />As sparrows eagles, or the hare the lion.<br />If I say sooth, I must report they were<br />As cannons overcharg&#039;d with double cracks;<br />So they<br />Doubly redoubled strokes upon the foe:<br />Except they meant to bathe in reeking wounds,<br />Or memorize another Golgotha,<br />I cannot tell:--<br />But I am faint; my gashes cry for help.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />So well thy words become thee as thy wounds;<br />They smack of honor both.--Go, get him surgeons.</p><p>(Exit Soldier, attended.)</p><p>Who comes here?</p><p>MALCOLM.<br />The worthy Thane of Ross.</p><p>LENNOX.<br />What a haste looks through his eyes! So should he look<br />That seems to speak things strange.</p><p>(Enter Ross.)</p><p>ROSS.<br />God save the King!</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />Whence cam&#039;st thou, worthy thane?</p><p>ROSS.<br />From Fife, great king;<br />Where the Norweyan banners flout the sky<br />And fan our people cold.<br />Norway himself, with terrible numbers,<br />Assisted by that most disloyal traitor<br />The Thane of Cawdor, began a dismal conflict;<br />Till that Bellona&#039;s bridegroom, lapp&#039;d in proof,<br />Confronted him with self-comparisons,<br />Point against point rebellious, arm &#039;gainst arm,<br />Curbing his lavish spirit: and, to conclude,<br />The victory fell on us.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />Great happiness!</p><p>ROSS.<br />That now<br />Sweno, the Norways&#039; king, craves composition;<br />Nor would we deign him burial of his men<br />Till he disbursed, at Saint Colme&#039;s-inch,<br />Ten thousand dollars to our general use.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />No more that Thane of Cawdor shall deceive<br />Our bosom interest:--go pronounce his present death,<br />And with his former title greet Macbeth.</p><p>ROSS.<br />I&#039;ll see it done.</p><p>DUNCAN.<br />What he hath lost, noble Macbeth hath won.</p><p>(Exeunt.)</p><br /><p>SCENE III. A heath.</p><p>(Thunder. Enter the three Witches.)</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Where hast thou been, sister?</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Killing swine.</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />Sister, where thou?</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />A sailor&#039;s wife had chestnuts in her lap,<br />And mounch&#039;d, and mounch&#039;d, and mounch&#039;d:--&quot;Give me,&quot; quoth I:<br />&quot;Aroint thee, witch!&quot; the rump-fed ronyon cries.<br />Her husband&#039;s to Aleppo gone, master o&#039; the Tiger:<br />But in a sieve I&#039;ll thither sail,<br />And, like a rat without a tail,<br />I&#039;ll do, I&#039;ll do, and I&#039;ll do.</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />I&#039;ll give thee a wind.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Thou art kind.</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />And I another.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />I myself have all the other:<br />And the very ports they blow,<br />All the quarters that they know<br />I&#039; the shipman&#039;s card.<br />I will drain him dry as hay:<br />Sleep shall neither night nor day<br />Hang upon his pent-house lid;<br />He shall live a man forbid:<br />Weary seven-nights nine times nine<br />Shall he dwindle, peak, and pine:<br />Though his bark cannot be lost,<br />Yet it shall be tempest-tost.--<br />Look what I have.</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Show me, show me.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Here I have a pilot&#039;s thumb,<br />Wreck&#039;d as homeward he did come.</p><p>(Drum within.)</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />A drum, a drum!<br />Macbeth doth come.</p><p>ALL.<br />The weird sisters, hand in hand,<br />Posters of the sea and land,<br />Thus do go about, about:<br />Thrice to thine, and thrice to mine,<br />And thrice again, to make up nine:--<br />Peace!--the charm&#039;s wound up.</p><p>(Enter Macbeth and Banquo.)</p><p>MACBETH.<br />So foul and fair a day I have not seen.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />How far is&#039;t call&#039;d to Forres?--What are these<br />So wither&#039;d, and so wild in their attire,<br />That look not like the inhabitants o&#039; the earth,<br />And yet are on&#039;t?--Live you? or are you aught<br />That man may question? You seem to understand me,<br />By each at once her chappy finger laying<br />Upon her skinny lips:--you should be women,<br />And yet your beards forbid me to interpret<br />That you are so.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Speak, if you can;--what are you?</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />All hail, Macbeth! hail to thee, Thane of Glamis!</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />All hail, Macbeth! hail to thee, Thane of Cawdor!</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />All hail, Macbeth! that shalt be king hereafter!</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Good sir, why do you start; and seem to fear<br />Things that do sound so fair?-- I&#039; the name of truth,<br />Are ye fantastical, or that indeed<br />Which outwardly ye show? My noble partner<br />You greet with present grace and great prediction<br />Of noble having and of royal hope,<br />That he seems rapt withal:--to me you speak not:<br />If you can look into the seeds of time,<br />And say which grain will grow, and which will not,<br />Speak then to me, who neither beg nor fear<br />Your favors nor your hate.</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Hail!</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Hail!</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />Hail!</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Lesser than Macbeth, and greater.</p><p>SECOND WITCH.<br />Not so happy, yet much happier.</p><p>THIRD WITCH.<br />Thou shalt get kings, though thou be none:<br />So all hail, Macbeth and Banquo!</p><p>FIRST WITCH.<br />Banquo and Macbeth, all hail!</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Stay, you imperfect speakers, tell me more:<br />By Sinel&#039;s death I know I am Thane of Glamis;<br />But how of Cawdor? The Thane of Cawdor lives,<br />A prosperous gentleman; and to be king<br />Stands not within the prospect of belief,<br />No more than to be Cawdor. Say from whence<br />You owe this strange intelligence? or why<br />Upon this blasted heath you stop our way<br />With such prophetic greeting?--Speak, I charge you.</p><p>(Witches vanish.)</p><p>BANQUO.<br />The earth hath bubbles, as the water has,<br />And these are of them:--whither are they vanish&#039;d?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Into the air; and what seem&#039;d corporal melted<br />As breath into the wind.--Would they had stay&#039;d!</p><p>BANQUO.<br />Were such things here as we do speak about?<br />Or have we eaten on the insane root<br />That takes the reason prisoner?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />Your children shall be kings.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />You shall be king.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />And Thane of Cawdor too; went it not so?</p><p>BANQUO.<br />To the selfsame tune and words. Who&#039;s here?</p><p>(Enter Ross and Angus.)</p><p>ROSS.<br />The king hath happily receiv&#039;d, Macbeth,<br />The news of thy success: and when he reads<br />Thy personal venture in the rebels&#039; fight,<br />His wonders and his praises do contend<br />Which should be thine or his: silenc&#039;d with that,<br />In viewing o&#039;er the rest o&#039; the self-same day,<br />He finds thee in the stout Norweyan ranks,<br />Nothing afeard of what thyself didst make,<br />Strange images of death. As thick as hail<br />Came post with post; and every one did bear<br />Thy praises in his kingdom&#039;s great defense,<br />And pour&#039;d them down before him.</p><p>ANGUS.<br />We are sent<br />To give thee, from our royal master, thanks;<br />Only to herald thee into his sight,<br />Not pay thee.</p><p>ROSS.<br />And, for an earnest of a greater honor,<br />He bade me, from him, call thee Thane of Cawdor:<br />In which addition, hail, most worthy thane,<br />For it is thine.</p><p>BANQUO.<br />What, can the devil speak true?</p><p>MACBETH.<br />The Thane of Cawdor lives: why do you dress me<br />In borrow&#039;d robes?</p><p>ANGUS.<br />Who was the Thane lives yet;<br />But under heavy judgement bears that life<br />Which he deserves to lose. Whether he was combin&#039;d<br />With those of Norway, or did line the rebel<br />With hidden help and vantage, or that with both<br />He labour&#039;d in his country&#039;s wreck, I know not;<br />But treasons capital, confess&#039;d and proved,<br />Have overthrown him.</p><p>MACBETH.<br />(Aside.) Glamis, and Thane of Cawdor:<br />The greatest is behind.--Thanks for your pains.--<br />Do you not hope your children shall be kings,<br />When those that gave the Thane of Cawdor to me<br />Promis&#039;d no less to them?</p><p>BANQUO.<br />That, trusted home,<br />Might yet enkindle you unto the crown,<br />Besides the Thane of Cawdor. But &#039;tis strange:<br />And oftentimes to win us to our harm,<br />The instruments of darkness tell us truths;<br />Win us with honest trifles, to betray&#039;s<br />In deepest consequence.--<br />Cousins, a word, I pray you.</p>]]></content>
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				<name><![CDATA[Giperion]]></name>
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			</author>
			<updated>2016-07-28T22:41:09Z</updated>
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