Shakespearean Tragedy eBook

Andrew Cecil Bradley
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 637 pages of information about Shakespearean Tragedy.

Shakespearean Tragedy eBook

Andrew Cecil Bradley
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 637 pages of information about Shakespearean Tragedy.

     I shall find time, Cassius, I shall find time.

For the opposite strain of feeling cf.  Sonnet 90: 

     Then hate me if thou wilt; if ever, now,
     Now while the world is bent my deeds to cross.]

LECTURE X

MACBETH

1

To regard Macbeth as a play, like the love-tragedies Romeo and Juliet and Antony and Cleopatra, in which there are two central characters of equal importance, is certainly a mistake.  But Shakespeare himself is in a measure responsible for it, because the first half of Macbeth is greater than the second, and in the first half Lady Macbeth not only appears more than in the second but exerts the ultimate deciding influence on the action.  And, in the opening Act at least, Lady Macbeth is the most commanding and perhaps the most awe-inspiring figure that Shakespeare drew.  Sharing, as we have seen, certain traits with her husband, she is at once clearly distinguished from him by an inflexibility of will, which appears to hold imagination, feeling, and conscience completely in check.  To her the prophecy of things that will be becomes instantaneously the determination that they shall be: 

Glamis thou art, and Cawdor, and shalt be
That thou art promised.

She knows her husband’s weakness, how he scruples ’to catch the nearest way’ to the object he desires; and she sets herself without a trace of doubt or conflict to counteract this weakness.  To her there is no separation between will and deed; and, as the deed falls in part to her, she is sure it will be done: 

                   The raven himself is hoarse
     That croaks the fatal entrance of Duncan
     Under my battlements.

On the moment of Macbeth’s rejoining her, after braving infinite dangers and winning infinite praise, without a syllable on these subjects or a word of affection, she goes straight to her purpose and permits him to speak of nothing else.  She takes the superior position and assumes the direction of affairs,—­appears to assume it even more than she really can, that she may spur him on.  She animates him by picturing the deed as heroic, ‘this night’s great business,’ or ‘our great quell,’ while she ignores its cruelty and faithlessness.  She bears down his faint resistance by presenting him with a prepared scheme which may remove from him the terror and danger of deliberation.  She rouses him with a taunt no man can bear, and least of all a soldier,—­the word ‘coward.’  She appeals even to his love for her: 

                 from this time
     Such I account thy love;

—­such, that is, as the protestations of a drunkard.  Her reasonings are mere sophisms; they could persuade no man.  It is not by them, it is by personal appeals, through the admiration she extorts from him, and through sheer force of will, that she impels him to the deed.  Her eyes are fixed upon the crown and the means to it; she does not attend to the consequences.  Her plan of laying the guilt upon the chamberlains is invented on the spur of the moment, and simply to satisfy her husband.  Her true mind is heard in the ringing cry with which she answers his question, ‘Will it not be received ... that they have done it?’

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Shakespearean Tragedy from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.