The Tragedie of Macbeth | |
Actus Primus. Scoena Prima. | |
Thunder and Lightning. Enter three Witches. | |
1. When shall we three meet againe? | |
In Thunder, Lightning, or in Raine? | |
2. When the Hurley-burley's done, | |
When the Battaile's lost, and wonne | |
3. That will be ere the set of Sunne | |
1. Where the place? | |
2. Vpon the Heath | |
3. There to meet with Macbeth | |
1. I come, Gray-Malkin | |
All. Padock calls anon: faire is foule, and foule is faire, | |
Houer through the fogge and filthie ayre. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Secunda. | |
Alarum within. Enter King Malcome, Donalbaine, Lenox, with | |
attendants, | |
meeting a bleeding Captaine. | |
King. What bloody man is that? he can report, | |
As seemeth by his plight, of the Reuolt | |
The newest state | |
Mal. This is the Serieant, | |
Who like a good and hardie Souldier fought | |
'Gainst my Captiuitie: Haile braue friend; | |
Say to the King, the knowledge of the Broyle, | |
As thou didst leaue it | |
Cap. Doubtfull it stood, | |
As two spent Swimmers, that doe cling together, | |
And choake their Art: The mercilesse Macdonwald | |
(Worthie to be a Rebell, for to that | |
The multiplying Villanies of Nature | |
Doe swarme vpon him) from the Westerne Isles | |
Of Kernes and Gallowgrosses is supply'd, | |
And Fortune on his damned Quarry smiling, | |
Shew'd like a Rebells Whore: but all's too weake: | |
For braue Macbeth (well hee deserues that Name) | |
Disdayning Fortune, with his brandisht Steele, | |
Which smoak'd with bloody execution | |
(Like Valours Minion) caru'd out his passage, | |
Till hee fac'd the Slaue: | |
Which neu'r shooke hands, nor bad farwell to him, | |
Till he vnseam'd him from the Naue toth' Chops, | |
And fix'd his Head vpon our Battlements | |
King. O valiant Cousin, worthy Gentleman | |
Cap. As whence the Sunne 'gins his reflection, | |
Shipwracking Stormes, and direfull Thunders: | |
So from that Spring, whence comfort seem'd to come, | |
Discomfort swells: Marke King of Scotland, marke, | |
No sooner Iustice had, with Valour arm'd, | |
Compell'd these skipping Kernes to trust their heeles, | |
But the Norweyan Lord, surueying vantage, | |
With furbusht Armes, and new supplyes of men, | |
Began a fresh assault | |
King. Dismay'd not this our Captaines, Macbeth and | |
Banquoh? | |
Cap. Yes, as Sparrowes, Eagles; | |
Or the Hare, the Lyon: | |
If I say sooth, I must report they were | |
As Cannons ouer-charg'd with double Cracks, | |
So they doubly redoubled stroakes vpon the Foe: | |
Except they meant to bathe in reeking Wounds, | |
Or memorize another Golgotha, | |
I cannot tell: but I am faint, | |
My Gashes cry for helpe | |
King. So well thy words become thee, as thy wounds, | |
They smack of Honor both: Goe get him Surgeons. | |
Enter Rosse and Angus. | |
Who comes here? | |
Mal. The worthy Thane of Rosse | |
Lenox. What a haste lookes through his eyes? | |
So should he looke, that seemes to speake things strange | |
Rosse. God saue the King | |
King. Whence cam'st thou, worthy Thane? | |
Rosse. From Fiffe, great King, | |
Where the Norweyan Banners flowt the Skie, | |
And fanne our people cold. | |
Norway himselfe, with terrible numbers, | |
Assisted by that most disloyall Traytor, | |
The Thane of Cawdor, began a dismall Conflict, | |
Till that Bellona's Bridegroome, lapt in proofe, | |
Confronted him with selfe-comparisons, | |
Point against Point, rebellious Arme 'gainst Arme, | |
Curbing his lauish spirit: and to conclude, | |
The Victorie fell on vs | |
King. Great happinesse | |
Rosse. That now Sweno, the Norwayes King, | |
Craues composition: | |
Nor would we deigne him buriall of his men, | |
Till he disbursed, at Saint Colmes ynch, | |
Ten thousand Dollars, to our generall vse | |
King. No more that Thane of Cawdor shall deceiue | |
Our Bosome interest: Goe pronounce his present death, | |
And with his former Title greet Macbeth | |
Rosse. Ile see it done | |
King. What he hath lost, Noble Macbeth hath wonne. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Tertia. | |
Thunder. Enter the three Witches. | |
1. Where hast thou beene, Sister? | |
2. Killing Swine | |
3. Sister, where thou? | |
1. A Saylors Wife had Chestnuts in her Lappe, | |
And mouncht, & mouncht, and mouncht: | |
Giue me, quoth I. | |
Aroynt thee, Witch, the rumpe-fed Ronyon cryes. | |
Her Husband's to Aleppo gone, Master o'th' Tiger: | |
But in a Syue Ile thither sayle, | |
And like a Rat without a tayle, | |
Ile doe, Ile doe, and Ile doe | |
2. Ile giue thee a Winde | |
1. Th'art kinde | |
3. And I another | |
1. I my selfe haue all the other, | |
And the very Ports they blow, | |
All the Quarters that they know, | |
I'th' Ship-mans Card. | |
Ile dreyne him drie as Hay: | |
Sleepe shall neyther Night nor Day | |
Hang vpon his Pent-house Lid: | |
He shall liue a man forbid: | |
Wearie Seu'nights, nine times nine, | |
Shall he dwindle, peake, and pine: | |
Though his Barke cannot be lost, | |
Yet it shall be Tempest-tost. | |
Looke what I haue | |
2. Shew me, shew me | |
1. Here I haue a Pilots Thumbe, | |
Wrackt, as homeward he did come. | |
Drum within. | |
3. A Drumme, a Drumme: | |
Macbeth doth come | |
All. The weyward Sisters, hand in hand, | |
Posters of the Sea and Land, | |
Thus doe goe, about, about, | |
Thrice to thine, and thrice to mine, | |
And thrice againe, to make vp nine. | |
Peace, the Charme's wound vp. | |
Enter Macbeth and Banquo. | |
Macb. So foule and faire a day I haue not seene | |
Banquo. How farre is't call'd to Soris? What are these, | |
So wither'd, and so wilde in their attyre, | |
That looke not like th' Inhabitants o'th' Earth, | |
And yet are on't? Liue you, or are you aught | |
That man may question? you seeme to vnderstand me, | |
By each at once her choppie finger laying | |
Vpon her skinnie Lips: you should be Women, | |
And yet your Beards forbid me to interprete | |
That you are so | |
Mac. Speake if you can: what are you? | |
1. All haile Macbeth, haile to thee Thane of Glamis | |
2. All haile Macbeth, haile to thee Thane of Cawdor | |
3. All haile Macbeth, that shalt be King hereafter | |
Banq. Good Sir, why doe you start, and seeme to feare | |
Things that doe sound so faire? i'th' name of truth | |
Are ye fantasticall, or that indeed | |
Which outwardly ye shew? My Noble Partner | |
You greet with present Grace, and great prediction | |
Of Noble hauing, and of Royall hope, | |
That he seemes wrapt withall: to me you speake not. | |
If you can looke into the Seedes of Time, | |
And say, which Graine will grow, and which will not, | |
Speake then to me, who neyther begge, nor feare | |
Your fauors, nor your hate | |
1. Hayle | |
2. Hayle | |
3. Hayle | |
1. Lesser than Macbeth, and greater | |
2. Not so happy, yet much happyer | |
3. Thou shalt get Kings, though thou be none: | |
So all haile Macbeth, and Banquo | |
1. Banquo, and Macbeth, all haile | |
Macb. Stay you imperfect Speakers, tell me more: | |
By Sinells death, I know I am Thane of Glamis, | |
But how, of Cawdor? the Thane of Cawdor liues | |
A prosperous Gentleman: And to be King, | |
Stands not within the prospect of beleefe, | |
No more then to be Cawdor. Say from whence | |
You owe this strange Intelligence, or why | |
Vpon this blasted Heath you stop our way | |
With such Prophetique greeting? | |
Speake, I charge you. | |
Witches vanish. | |
Banq. The Earth hath bubbles, as the Water ha's, | |
And these are of them: whither are they vanish'd? | |
Macb. Into the Ayre: and what seem'd corporall, | |
Melted, as breath into the Winde. | |
Would they had stay'd | |
Banq. Were such things here, as we doe speake about? | |
Or haue we eaten on the insane Root, | |
That takes the Reason Prisoner? | |
Macb. Your Children shall be Kings | |
Banq. You shall be King | |
Macb. And Thane of Cawdor too: went it not so? | |
Banq. Toth' selfe-same tune and words: who's here? | |
Enter Rosse and Angus. | |
Rosse. The King hath happily receiu'd, Macbeth, | |
The newes of thy successe: and when he reades | |
Thy personall Venture in the Rebels sight, | |
His Wonders and his Prayses doe contend, | |
Which should be thine, or his: silenc'd with that, | |
In viewing o're the rest o'th' selfe-same day, | |
He findes thee in the stout Norweyan Rankes, | |
Nothing afeard of what thy selfe didst make | |
Strange Images of death, as thick as Tale | |
Can post with post, and euery one did beare | |
Thy prayses in his Kingdomes great defence, | |
And powr'd them downe before him | |
Ang. Wee are sent, | |
To giue thee from our Royall Master thanks, | |
Onely to harrold thee into his sight, | |
Not pay thee | |
Rosse. And for an earnest of a greater Honor, | |
He bad me, from him, call thee Thane of Cawdor: | |
In which addition, haile most worthy Thane, | |
For it is thine | |
Banq. What, can the Deuill speake true? | |
Macb. The Thane of Cawdor liues: | |
Why doe you dresse me in borrowed Robes? | |
Ang. Who was the Thane, liues yet, | |
But vnder heauie Iudgement beares that Life, | |
Which he deserues to loose. | |
Whether he was combin'd with those of Norway, | |
Or did lyne the Rebell with hidden helpe, | |
And vantage; or that with both he labour'd | |
In his Countreyes wracke, I know not: | |
But Treasons Capitall, confess'd, and prou'd, | |
Haue ouerthrowne him | |
Macb. Glamys, and Thane of Cawdor: | |
The greatest is behinde. Thankes for your paines. | |
Doe you not hope your Children shall be Kings, | |
When those that gaue the Thane of Cawdor to me, | |
Promis'd no lesse to them | |
Banq. That trusted home, | |
Might yet enkindle you vnto the Crowne, | |
Besides the Thane of Cawdor. But 'tis strange: | |
And oftentimes, to winne vs to our harme, | |
The Instruments of Darknesse tell vs Truths, | |
Winne vs with honest Trifles, to betray's | |
In deepest consequence. | |
Cousins, a word, I pray you | |
Macb. Two Truths are told, | |
As happy Prologues to the swelling Act | |
Of the Imperiall Theame. I thanke you Gentlemen: | |
This supernaturall solliciting | |
Cannot be ill; cannot be good. | |
If ill? why hath it giuen me earnest of successe, | |
Commencing in a Truth? I am Thane of Cawdor. | |
If good? why doe I yeeld to that suggestion, | |
Whose horrid Image doth vnfixe my Heire, | |
And make my seated Heart knock at my Ribbes, | |
Against the vse of Nature? Present Feares | |
Are lesse then horrible Imaginings: | |
My Thought, whose Murther yet is but fantasticall, | |
Shakes so my single state of Man, | |
That Function is smother'd in surmise, | |
And nothing is, but what is not | |
Banq. Looke how our Partner's rapt | |
Macb. If Chance will haue me King, | |
Why Chance may Crowne me, | |
Without my stirre | |
Banq. New Honors come vpon him | |
Like our strange Garments, cleaue not to their mould, | |
But with the aid of vse | |
Macb. Come what come may, | |
Time, and the Houre, runs through the roughest Day | |
Banq. Worthy Macbeth, wee stay vpon your leysure | |
Macb. Giue me your fauour: | |
My dull Braine was wrought with things forgotten. | |
Kinde Gentlemen, your paines are registred, | |
Where euery day I turne the Leafe, | |
To reade them. | |
Let vs toward the King: thinke vpon | |
What hath chanc'd: and at more time, | |
The Interim hauing weigh'd it, let vs speake | |
Our free Hearts each to other | |
Banq. Very gladly | |
Macb. Till then enough: | |
Come friends. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Quarta. | |
Flourish. Enter King, Lenox, Malcolme, Donalbaine, and | |
Attendants. | |
King. Is execution done on Cawdor? | |
Or not those in Commission yet return'd? | |
Mal. My Liege, they are not yet come back. | |
But I haue spoke with one that saw him die: | |
Who did report, that very frankly hee | |
Confess'd his Treasons, implor'd your Highnesse Pardon, | |
And set forth a deepe Repentance: | |
Nothing in his Life became him, | |
Like the leauing it. Hee dy'de, | |
As one that had beene studied in his death, | |
To throw away the dearest thing he ow'd, | |
As 'twere a carelesse Trifle | |
King. There's no Art, | |
To finde the Mindes construction in the Face. | |
He was a Gentleman, on whom I built | |
An absolute Trust. | |
Enter Macbeth, Banquo, Rosse, and Angus. | |
O worthyest Cousin, | |
The sinne of my Ingratitude euen now | |
Was heauie on me. Thou art so farre before, | |
That swiftest Wing of Recompence is slow, | |
To ouertake thee. Would thou hadst lesse deseru'd, | |
That the proportion both of thanks, and payment, | |
Might haue beene mine: onely I haue left to say, | |
More is thy due, then more then all can pay | |
Macb. The seruice, and the loyaltie I owe, | |
In doing it, payes it selfe. | |
Your Highnesse part, is to receiue our Duties: | |
And our Duties are to your Throne, and State, | |
Children, and Seruants; which doe but what they should, | |
By doing euery thing safe toward your Loue | |
And Honor | |
King. Welcome hither: | |
I haue begun to plant thee, and will labour | |
To make thee full of growing. Noble Banquo, | |
That hast no lesse deseru'd, nor must be knowne | |
No lesse to haue done so: Let me enfold thee, | |
And hold thee to my Heart | |
Banq. There if I grow, | |
The Haruest is your owne | |
King. My plenteous Ioyes, | |
Wanton in fulnesse, seeke to hide themselues | |
In drops of sorrow. Sonnes, Kinsmen, Thanes, | |
And you whose places are the nearest, know, | |
We will establish our Estate vpon | |
Our eldest, Malcolme, whom we name hereafter, | |
The Prince of Cumberland: which Honor must | |
Not vnaccompanied, inuest him onely, | |
But signes of Noblenesse, like Starres, shall shine | |
On all deseruers. From hence to Envernes, | |
And binde vs further to you | |
Macb. The Rest is Labor, which is not vs'd for you: | |
Ile be my selfe the Herbenger, and make ioyfull | |
The hearing of my Wife, with your approach: | |
So humbly take my leaue | |
King. My worthy Cawdor | |
Macb. The Prince of Cumberland: that is a step, | |
On which I must fall downe, or else o're-leape, | |
For in my way it lyes. Starres hide your fires, | |
Let not Light see my black and deepe desires: | |
The Eye winke at the Hand: yet let that bee, | |
Which the Eye feares, when it is done to see. | |
Enter. | |
King. True worthy Banquo: he is full so valiant, | |
And in his commendations, I am fed: | |
It is a Banquet to me. Let's after him, | |
Whose care is gone before, to bid vs welcome: | |
It is a peerelesse Kinsman. | |
Flourish. Exeunt. | |
Scena Quinta. | |
Enter Macbeths Wife alone with a Letter. | |
Lady. They met me in the day of successe: and I haue | |
learn'd by the perfect'st report, they haue more in them, then | |
mortall knowledge. When I burnt in desire to question them | |
further, they made themselues Ayre, into which they vanish'd. | |
Whiles I stood rapt in the wonder of it, came Missiues from | |
the King, who all-hail'd me Thane of Cawdor, by which Title | |
before, these weyward Sisters saluted me, and referr'd me to | |
the comming on of time, with haile King that shalt be. This | |
haue I thought good to deliuer thee (my dearest Partner of | |
Greatnesse) that thou might'st not loose the dues of reioycing | |
by being ignorant of what Greatnesse is promis'd thee. Lay | |
it to thy heart and farewell. | |
Glamys thou art, and Cawdor, and shalt be | |
What thou art promis'd: yet doe I feare thy Nature, | |
It is too full o'th' Milke of humane kindnesse, | |
To catch the neerest way. Thou would'st be great, | |
Art not without Ambition, but without | |
The illnesse should attend it. What thou would'st highly, | |
That would'st thou holily: would'st not play false, | |
And yet would'st wrongly winne. | |
Thould'st haue, great Glamys, that which cryes, | |
Thus thou must doe, if thou haue it; | |
And that which rather thou do'st feare to doe, | |
Then wishest should be vndone. High thee hither, | |
That I may powre my Spirits in thine Eare, | |
And chastise with the valour of my Tongue | |
All that impeides thee from the Golden Round, | |
Which Fate and Metaphysicall ayde doth seeme | |
To haue thee crown'd withall. | |
Enter Messenger. | |
What is your tidings? | |
Mess. The King comes here to Night | |
Lady. Thou'rt mad to say it. | |
Is not thy Master with him? who, wer't so, | |
Would haue inform'd for preparation | |
Mess. So please you, it is true: our Thane is comming: | |
One of my fellowes had the speed of him; | |
Who almost dead for breath, had scarcely more | |
Then would make vp his Message | |
Lady. Giue him tending, | |
He brings great newes, | |
Exit Messenger. | |
The Rauen himselfe is hoarse, | |
That croakes the fatall entrance of Duncan | |
Vnder my Battlements. Come you Spirits, | |
That tend on mortall thoughts, vnsex me here, | |
And fill me from the Crowne to the Toe, top-full | |
Of direst Crueltie: make thick my blood, | |
Stop vp th' accesse, and passage to Remorse, | |
That no compunctious visitings of Nature | |
Shake my fell purpose, nor keepe peace betweene | |
Th' effect, and hit. Come to my Womans Brests, | |
And take my Milke for Gall, you murth'ring Ministers, | |
Where-euer, in your sightlesse substances, | |
You wait on Natures Mischiefe. Come thick Night, | |
And pall thee in the dunnest smoake of Hell, | |
That my keene Knife see not the Wound it makes, | |
Nor Heauen peepe through the Blanket of the darke, | |
To cry, hold, hold. | |
Enter Macbeth. | |
Great Glamys, worthy Cawdor, | |
Greater then both, by the all-haile hereafter, | |
Thy Letters haue transported me beyond | |
This ignorant present, and I feele now | |
The future in the instant | |
Macb. My dearest Loue, | |
Duncan comes here to Night | |
Lady. And when goes hence? | |
Macb. To morrow, as he purposes | |
Lady. O neuer, | |
Shall Sunne that Morrow see. | |
Your Face, my Thane, is as a Booke, where men | |
May reade strange matters, to beguile the time. | |
Looke like the time, beare welcome in your Eye, | |
Your Hand, your Tongue: looke like th' innocent flower, | |
But be the Serpent vnder't. He that's comming, | |
Must be prouided for: and you shall put | |
This Nights great Businesse into my dispatch, | |
Which shall to all our Nights, and Dayes to come, | |
Giue solely soueraigne sway, and Masterdome | |
Macb. We will speake further, | |
Lady. Onely looke vp cleare: | |
To alter fauor, euer is to feare: | |
Leaue all the rest to me. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Sexta. | |
Hoboyes, and Torches. Enter King, Malcolme, Donalbaine, | |
Banquo, Lenox, | |
Macduff, Rosse, Angus, and Attendants. | |
King. This Castle hath a pleasant seat, | |
The ayre nimbly and sweetly recommends it selfe | |
Vnto our gentle sences | |
Banq. This Guest of Summer, | |
The Temple-haunting Barlet does approue, | |
By his loued Mansonry, that the Heauens breath | |
Smells wooingly here: no Iutty frieze, | |
Buttrice, nor Coigne of Vantage, but this Bird | |
Hath made his pendant Bed, and procreant Cradle, | |
Where they must breed, and haunt: I haue obseru'd | |
The ayre is delicate. | |
Enter Lady. | |
King. See, see our honor'd Hostesse: | |
The Loue that followes vs, sometime is our trouble, | |
Which still we thanke as Loue. Herein I teach you, | |
How you shall bid God-eyld vs for your paines, | |
And thanke vs for your trouble | |
Lady. All our seruice, | |
In euery point twice done, and then done double, | |
Were poore, and single Businesse, to contend | |
Against those Honors deepe, and broad, | |
Wherewith your Maiestie loades our House: | |
For those of old, and the late Dignities, | |
Heap'd vp to them, we rest your Ermites | |
King. Where's the Thane of Cawdor? | |
We courst him at the heeles, and had a purpose | |
To be his Purueyor: But he rides well, | |
And his great Loue (sharpe as his Spurre) hath holp him | |
To his home before vs: Faire and Noble Hostesse | |
We are your guest to night | |
La. Your Seruants euer, | |
Haue theirs, themselues, and what is theirs in compt, | |
To make their Audit at your Highnesse pleasure, | |
Still to returne your owne | |
King. Giue me your hand: | |
Conduct me to mine Host we loue him highly, | |
And shall continue, our Graces towards him. | |
By your leaue Hostesse. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Septima. | |
Hoboyes. Torches. Enter a Sewer, and diuers Seruants with Dishes | |
and | |
Seruice ouer the Stage. Then enter Macbeth | |
Macb. If it were done, when 'tis done, then 'twer well, | |
It were done quickly: If th' Assassination | |
Could trammell vp the Consequence, and catch | |
With his surcease, Successe: that but this blow | |
Might be the be all, and the end all. Heere, | |
But heere, vpon this Banke and Schoole of time, | |
Wee'ld iumpe the life to come. But in these Cases, | |
We still haue iudgement heere, that we but teach | |
Bloody Instructions, which being taught, returne | |
To plague th' Inuenter, this euen-handed Iustice | |
Commends th' Ingredience of our poyson'd Challice | |
To our owne lips. Hee's heere in double trust; | |
First, as I am his Kinsman, and his Subiect, | |
Strong both against the Deed: Then, as his Host, | |
Who should against his Murtherer shut the doore, | |
Not beare the knife my selfe. Besides, this Duncane | |
Hath borne his Faculties so meeke; hath bin | |
So cleere in his great Office, that his Vertues | |
Will pleade like Angels, Trumpet-tongu'd against | |
The deepe damnation of his taking off: | |
And Pitty, like a naked New-borne-Babe, | |
Striding the blast, or Heauens Cherubin, hors'd | |
Vpon the sightlesse Curriors of the Ayre, | |
Shall blow the horrid deed in euery eye, | |
That teares shall drowne the winde. I haue no Spurre | |
To pricke the sides of my intent, but onely | |
Vaulting Ambition, which ore-leapes it selfe, | |
And falles on th' other. | |
Enter Lady. | |
How now? What Newes? | |
La. He has almost supt: why haue you left the chamber? | |
Mac. Hath he ask'd for me? | |
La. Know you not, he ha's? | |
Mac. We will proceed no further in this Businesse: | |
He hath Honour'd me of late, and I haue bought | |
Golden Opinions from all sorts of people, | |
Which would be worne now in their newest glosse, | |
Not cast aside so soone | |
La. Was the hope drunke, | |
Wherein you drest your selfe? Hath it slept since? | |
And wakes it now to looke so greene, and pale, | |
At what it did so freely? From this time, | |
Such I account thy loue. Art thou affear'd | |
To be the same in thine owne Act, and Valour, | |
As thou art in desire? Would'st thou haue that | |
Which thou esteem'st the Ornament of Life, | |
And liue a Coward in thine owne Esteeme? | |
Letting I dare not, wait vpon I would, | |
Like the poore Cat i'th' Addage | |
Macb. Prythee peace: | |
I dare do all that may become a man, | |
Who dares do more, is none | |
La. What Beast was't then | |
That made you breake this enterprize to me? | |
When you durst do it, then you were a man: | |
And to be more then what you were, you would | |
Be so much more the man. Nor time, nor place | |
Did then adhere, and yet you would make both: | |
They haue made themselues, and that their fitnesse now | |
Do's vnmake you. I haue giuen Sucke, and know | |
How tender 'tis to loue the Babe that milkes me, | |
I would, while it was smyling in my Face, | |
Haue pluckt my Nipple from his Bonelesse Gummes, | |
And dasht the Braines out, had I so sworne | |
As you haue done to this | |
Macb. If we should faile? | |
Lady. We faile? | |
But screw your courage to the sticking place, | |
And wee'le not fayle: when Duncan is asleepe, | |
(Whereto the rather shall his dayes hard Iourney | |
Soundly inuite him) his two Chamberlaines | |
Will I with Wine, and Wassell, so conuince, | |
That Memorie, the Warder of the Braine, | |
Shall be a Fume, and the Receit of Reason | |
A Lymbeck onely: when in Swinish sleepe, | |
Their drenched Natures lyes as in a Death, | |
What cannot you and I performe vpon | |
Th' vnguarded Duncan? What not put vpon | |
His spungie Officers? who shall beare the guilt | |
Of our great quell | |
Macb. Bring forth Men-Children onely: | |
For thy vndaunted Mettle should compose | |
Nothing but Males. Will it not be receiu'd, | |
When we haue mark'd with blood those sleepie two | |
Of his owne Chamber, and vs'd their very Daggers, | |
That they haue don't? | |
Lady. Who dares receiue it other, | |
As we shall make our Griefes and Clamor rore, | |
Vpon his Death? | |
Macb. I am settled, and bend vp | |
Each corporall Agent to this terrible Feat. | |
Away, and mock the time with fairest show, | |
False Face must hide what the false Heart doth know. | |
Exeunt. | |
Actus Secundus. Scena Prima. | |
Enter Banquo, and Fleance, with a Torch before him. | |
Banq. How goes the Night, Boy? | |
Fleance. The Moone is downe: I haue not heard the | |
Clock | |
Banq. And she goes downe at Twelue | |
Fleance. I take't, 'tis later, Sir | |
Banq. Hold, take my Sword: | |
There's Husbandry in Heauen, | |
Their Candles are all out: take thee that too. | |
A heauie Summons lyes like Lead vpon me, | |
And yet I would not sleepe: | |
Mercifull Powers, restraine in me the cursed thoughts | |
That Nature giues way to in repose. | |
Enter Macbeth, and a Seruant with a Torch. | |
Giue me my Sword: who's there? | |
Macb. A Friend | |
Banq. What Sir, not yet at rest? the King's a bed. | |
He hath beene in vnusuall Pleasure, | |
And sent forth great Largesse to your Offices. | |
This Diamond he greetes your Wife withall, | |
By the name of most kind Hostesse, | |
And shut vp in measurelesse content | |
Mac. Being vnprepar'd, | |
Our will became the seruant to defect, | |
Which else should free haue wrought | |
Banq. All's well. | |
I dreamt last Night of the three weyward Sisters: | |
To you they haue shew'd some truth | |
Macb. I thinke not of them: | |
Yet when we can entreat an houre to serue, | |
We would spend it in some words vpon that Businesse, | |
If you would graunt the time | |
Banq. At your kind'st leysure | |
Macb. If you shall cleaue to my consent, | |
When 'tis, it shall make Honor for you | |
Banq. So I lose none, | |
In seeking to augment it, but still keepe | |
My Bosome franchis'd, and Allegeance cleare, | |
I shall be counsail'd | |
Macb. Good repose the while | |
Banq. Thankes Sir: the like to you. | |
Exit Banquo. | |
Macb. Goe bid thy Mistresse, when my drinke is ready, | |
She strike vpon the Bell. Get thee to bed. | |
Enter. | |
Is this a Dagger, which I see before me, | |
The Handle toward my Hand? Come, let me clutch thee: | |
I haue thee not, and yet I see thee still. | |
Art thou not fatall Vision, sensible | |
To feeling, as to sight? or art thou but | |
A Dagger of the Minde, a false Creation, | |
Proceeding from the heat-oppressed Braine? | |
I see thee yet, in forme as palpable, | |
As this which now I draw. | |
Thou marshall'st me the way that I was going, | |
And such an Instrument I was to vse. | |
Mine Eyes are made the fooles o'th' other Sences, | |
Or else worth all the rest: I see thee still; | |
And on thy Blade, and Dudgeon, Gouts of Blood, | |
Which was not so before. There's no such thing: | |
It is the bloody Businesse, which informes | |
Thus to mine Eyes. Now o're the one halfe World | |
Nature seemes dead, and wicked Dreames abuse | |
The Curtain'd sleepe: Witchcraft celebrates | |
Pale Heccats Offrings: and wither'd Murther, | |
Alarum'd by his Centinell, the Wolfe, | |
Whose howle's his Watch, thus with his stealthy pace, | |
With Tarquins rauishing sides, towards his designe | |
Moues like a Ghost. Thou sowre and firme-set Earth | |
Heare not my steps, which they may walke, for feare | |
Thy very stones prate of my where-about, | |
And take the present horror from the time, | |
Which now sutes with it. Whiles I threat, he liues: | |
Words to the heat of deedes too cold breath giues. | |
A Bell rings. | |
I goe, and it is done: the Bell inuites me. | |
Heare it not, Duncan, for it is a Knell, | |
That summons thee to Heauen, or to Hell. | |
Enter. | |
Scena Secunda. | |
Enter Lady. | |
La. That which hath made the[m] drunk, hath made me bold: | |
What hath quench'd them, hath giuen me fire. | |
Hearke, peace: it was the Owle that shriek'd, | |
The fatall Bell-man, which giues the stern'st good-night. | |
He is about it, the Doores are open: | |
And the surfeted Groomes doe mock their charge | |
With Snores. I haue drugg'd their Possets, | |
That Death and Nature doe contend about them, | |
Whether they liue, or dye. | |
Enter Macbeth. | |
Macb. Who's there? what hoa? | |
Lady. Alack, I am afraid they haue awak'd, | |
And 'tis not done: th' attempt, and not the deed, | |
Confounds vs: hearke: I lay'd their Daggers ready, | |
He could not misse 'em. Had he not resembled | |
My Father as he slept, I had don't. | |
My Husband? | |
Macb. I haue done the deed: | |
Didst thou not heare a noyse? | |
Lady. I heard the Owle schreame, and the Crickets cry. | |
Did not you speake? | |
Macb. When? | |
Lady. Now | |
Macb. As I descended? | |
Lady. I | |
Macb. Hearke, who lyes i'th' second Chamber? | |
Lady. Donalbaine | |
Mac. This is a sorry sight | |
Lady. A foolish thought, to say a sorry sight | |
Macb. There's one did laugh in's sleepe, | |
And one cry'd Murther, that they did wake each other: | |
I stood, and heard them: But they did say their Prayers, | |
And addrest them againe to sleepe | |
Lady. There are two lodg'd together | |
Macb. One cry'd God blesse vs, and Amen the other, | |
As they had seene me with these Hangmans hands: | |
Listning their feare, I could not say Amen, | |
When they did say God blesse vs | |
Lady. Consider it not so deepely | |
Mac. But wherefore could not I pronounce Amen? | |
I had most need of Blessing, and Amen stuck in my throat | |
Lady. These deeds must not be thought | |
After these wayes: so, it will make vs mad | |
Macb. Me thought I heard a voyce cry, Sleep no more: | |
Macbeth does murther Sleepe, the innocent Sleepe, | |
Sleepe that knits vp the rauel'd Sleeue of Care, | |
The death of each dayes Life, sore Labors Bath, | |
Balme of hurt Mindes, great Natures second Course, | |
Chiefe nourisher in Life's Feast | |
Lady. What doe you meane? | |
Macb. Still it cry'd, Sleepe no more to all the House: | |
Glamis hath murther'd Sleepe, and therefore Cawdor | |
Shall sleepe no more: Macbeth shall sleepe no more | |
Lady. Who was it, that thus cry'd? why worthy Thane, | |
You doe vnbend your Noble strength, to thinke | |
So braine-sickly of things: Goe get some Water, | |
And wash this filthie Witnesse from your Hand. | |
Why did you bring these Daggers from the place? | |
They must lye there: goe carry them, and smeare | |
The sleepie Groomes with blood | |
Macb. Ile goe no more: | |
I am afraid, to thinke what I haue done: | |
Looke on't againe, I dare not | |
Lady. Infirme of purpose: | |
Giue me the Daggers: the sleeping, and the dead, | |
Are but as Pictures: 'tis the Eye of Childhood, | |
That feares a painted Deuill. If he doe bleed, | |
Ile guild the Faces of the Groomes withall, | |
For it must seeme their Guilt. | |
Enter. | |
Knocke within. | |
Macb. Whence is that knocking? | |
How is't with me, when euery noyse appalls me? | |
What Hands are here? hah: they pluck out mine Eyes. | |
Will all great Neptunes Ocean wash this blood | |
Cleane from my Hand? no: this my Hand will rather | |
The multitudinous Seas incarnardine, | |
Making the Greene one, Red. | |
Enter Lady. | |
Lady. My Hands are of your colour: but I shame | |
To weare a Heart so white. | |
Knocke. | |
I heare a knocking at the South entry: | |
Retyre we to our Chamber: | |
A little Water cleares vs of this deed. | |
How easie is it then? your Constancie | |
Hath left you vnattended. | |
Knocke. | |
Hearke, more knocking. | |
Get on your Night-Gowne, least occasion call vs, | |
And shew vs to be Watchers: be not lost | |
So poorely in your thoughts | |
Macb. To know my deed, | |
Knocke. | |
'Twere best not know my selfe. | |
Wake Duncan with thy knocking: | |
I would thou could'st. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Tertia. | |
Enter a Porter. Knocking within. | |
Porter. Here's a knocking indeede: if a man were | |
Porter of Hell Gate, hee should haue old turning the | |
Key. | |
Knock. | |
Knock, Knock, Knock. Who's there | |
i'th' name of Belzebub? Here's a Farmer, that hang'd | |
himselfe on th' expectation of Plentie: Come in time, haue | |
Napkins enow about you, here you'le sweat for't. | |
Knock. | |
Knock, knock. Who's there in th' other Deuils Name? | |
Faith here's an Equiuocator, that could sweare in both | |
the Scales against eyther Scale, who committed Treason | |
enough for Gods sake, yet could not equiuocate to Heauen: | |
oh come in, Equiuocator. | |
Knock. | |
Knock, Knock, Knock. Who's there? 'Faith here's an English | |
Taylor come hither, for stealing out of a French Hose: | |
Come in Taylor, here you may rost your Goose. | |
Knock. | |
Knock, Knock. Neuer at quiet: What are you? but this | |
place is too cold for Hell. Ile Deuill-Porter it no further: | |
I had thought to haue let in some of all Professions, that | |
goe the Primrose way to th' euerlasting Bonfire. | |
Knock. | |
Anon, anon, I pray you remember the Porter. | |
Enter Macduff, and Lenox. | |
Macd. Was it so late, friend, ere you went to Bed, | |
That you doe lye so late? | |
Port. Faith Sir, we were carowsing till the second Cock: | |
And Drinke, Sir, is a great prouoker of three things | |
Macd. What three things does Drinke especially | |
prouoke? | |
Port. Marry, Sir, Nose-painting, Sleepe, and Vrine. | |
Lecherie, Sir, it prouokes, and vnprouokes: it prouokes | |
the desire, but it takes away the performance. Therefore | |
much Drinke may be said to be an Equiuocator with Lecherie: | |
it makes him, and it marres him; it sets him on, | |
and it takes him off; it perswades him, and dis-heartens | |
him; makes him stand too, and not stand too: in conclusion, | |
equiuocates him in a sleepe, and giuing him the Lye, | |
leaues him | |
Macd. I beleeue, Drinke gaue thee the Lye last Night | |
Port. That it did, Sir, i'the very Throat on me: but I | |
requited him for his Lye, and (I thinke) being too strong | |
for him, though he tooke vp my Legges sometime, yet I | |
made a Shift to cast him. | |
Enter Macbeth. | |
Macd. Is thy Master stirring? | |
Our knocking ha's awak'd him: here he comes | |
Lenox. Good morrow, Noble Sir | |
Macb. Good morrow both | |
Macd. Is the King stirring, worthy Thane? | |
Macb. Not yet | |
Macd. He did command me to call timely on him, | |
I haue almost slipt the houre | |
Macb. Ile bring you to him | |
Macd. I know this is a ioyfull trouble to you: | |
But yet 'tis one | |
Macb. The labour we delight in, Physicks paine: | |
This is the Doore | |
Macd. Ile make so bold to call, for 'tis my limitted | |
seruice. | |
Exit Macduffe. | |
Lenox. Goes the King hence to day? | |
Macb. He does: he did appoint so | |
Lenox. The Night ha's been vnruly: | |
Where we lay, our Chimneys were blowne downe, | |
And (as they say) lamentings heard i'th' Ayre; | |
Strange Schreemes of Death, | |
And Prophecying, with Accents terrible, | |
Of dyre Combustion, and confus'd Euents, | |
New hatch'd toth' wofull time. | |
The obscure Bird clamor'd the liue-long Night. | |
Some say, the Earth was Feuorous, | |
And did shake | |
Macb. 'Twas a rough Night | |
Lenox. My young remembrance cannot paralell | |
A fellow to it. | |
Enter Macduff. | |
Macd. O horror, horror, horror, | |
Tongue nor Heart cannot conceiue, nor name thee | |
Macb. and Lenox. What's the matter? | |
Macd. Confusion now hath made his Master-peece: | |
Most sacrilegious Murther hath broke ope | |
The Lords anoynted Temple, and stole thence | |
The Life o'th' Building | |
Macb. What is't you say, the Life? | |
Lenox. Meane you his Maiestie? | |
Macd. Approch the Chamber, and destroy your sight | |
With a new Gorgon. Doe not bid me speake: | |
See, and then speake your selues: awake, awake, | |
Exeunt. Macbeth and Lenox. | |
Ring the Alarum Bell: Murther, and Treason, | |
Banquo, and Donalbaine: Malcolme awake, | |
Shake off this Downey sleepe, Deaths counterfeit, | |
And looke on Death it selfe: vp, vp, and see | |
The great Doomes Image: Malcolme, Banquo, | |
As from your Graues rise vp, and walke like Sprights, | |
To countenance this horror. Ring the Bell. | |
Bell rings. Enter Lady. | |
Lady. What's the Businesse? | |
That such a hideous Trumpet calls to parley | |
The sleepers of the House? speake, speake | |
Macd. O gentle Lady, | |
'Tis not for you to heare what I can speake: | |
The repetition in a Womans eare, | |
Would murther as it fell. | |
Enter Banquo. | |
O Banquo, Banquo, Our Royall Master's murther'd | |
Lady. Woe, alas: | |
What, in our House? | |
Ban. Too cruell, any where. | |
Deare Duff, I prythee contradict thy selfe, | |
And say, it is not so. | |
Enter Macbeth, Lenox, and Rosse. | |
Macb. Had I but dy'd an houre before this chance, | |
I had liu'd a blessed time: for from this instant, | |
There's nothing serious in Mortalitie: | |
All is but Toyes: Renowne and Grace is dead, | |
The Wine of Life is drawne, and the meere Lees | |
Is left this Vault, to brag of. | |
Enter Malcolme and Donalbaine. | |
Donal. What is amisse? | |
Macb. You are, and doe not know't: | |
The Spring, the Head, the Fountaine of your Blood | |
Is stopt, the very Source of it is stopt | |
Macd. Your Royall Father's murther'd | |
Mal. Oh, by whom? | |
Lenox. Those of his Chamber, as it seem'd, had don't: | |
Their Hands and Faces were all badg'd with blood, | |
So were their Daggers, which vnwip'd, we found | |
Vpon their Pillowes: they star'd, and were distracted, | |
No mans Life was to be trusted with them | |
Macb. O, yet I doe repent me of my furie, | |
That I did kill them | |
Macd. Wherefore did you so? | |
Macb. Who can be wise, amaz'd, temp'rate, & furious, | |
Loyall, and Neutrall, in a moment? No man: | |
Th' expedition of my violent Loue | |
Out-run the pawser, Reason. Here lay Duncan, | |
His Siluer skinne, lac'd with His Golden Blood, | |
And his gash'd Stabs, look'd like a Breach in Nature, | |
For Ruines wastfull entrance: there the Murtherers, | |
Steep'd in the Colours of their Trade; their Daggers | |
Vnmannerly breech'd with gore: who could refraine, | |
That had a heart to loue; and in that heart, | |
Courage, to make's loue knowne? | |
Lady. Helpe me hence, hoa | |
Macd. Looke to the Lady | |
Mal. Why doe we hold our tongues, | |
That most may clayme this argument for ours? | |
Donal. What should be spoken here, | |
Where our Fate hid in an augure hole, | |
May rush, and seize vs? Let's away, | |
Our Teares are not yet brew'd | |
Mal. Nor our strong Sorrow | |
Vpon the foot of Motion | |
Banq. Looke to the Lady: | |
And when we haue our naked Frailties hid, | |
That suffer in exposure; let vs meet, | |
And question this most bloody piece of worke, | |
To know it further. Feares and scruples shake vs: | |
In the great Hand of God I stand, and thence, | |
Against the vndivulg'd pretence, I fight | |
Of Treasonous Mallice | |
Macd. And so doe I | |
All. So all | |
Macb. Let's briefely put on manly readinesse, | |
And meet i'th' Hall together | |
All. Well contented. | |
Exeunt. | |
Malc. What will you doe? | |
Let's not consort with them: | |
To shew an vnfelt Sorrow, is an Office | |
Which the false man do's easie. | |
Ile to England | |
Don. To Ireland, I: | |
Our seperated fortune shall keepe vs both the safer: | |
Where we are, there's Daggers in mens smiles; | |
The neere in blood, the neerer bloody | |
Malc. This murtherous Shaft that's shot, | |
Hath not yet lighted: and our safest way, | |
Is to auoid the ayme. Therefore to Horse, | |
And let vs not be daintie of leaue-taking, | |
But shift away: there's warrant in that Theft, | |
Which steales it selfe, when there's no mercie left. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Quarta. | |
Enter Rosse, with an Old man. | |
Old man. Threescore and ten I can remember well, | |
Within the Volume of which Time, I haue seene | |
Houres dreadfull, and things strange: but this sore Night | |
Hath trifled former knowings | |
Rosse. Ha, good Father, | |
Thou seest the Heauens, as troubled with mans Act, | |
Threatens his bloody Stage: byth' Clock 'tis Day, | |
And yet darke Night strangles the trauailing Lampe: | |
Is't Nights predominance, or the Dayes shame, | |
That Darknesse does the face of Earth intombe, | |
When liuing Light should kisse it? | |
Old man. 'Tis vnnaturall, | |
Euen like the deed that's done: On Tuesday last, | |
A Faulcon towring in her pride of place, | |
Was by a Mowsing Owle hawkt at, and kill'd | |
Rosse. And Duncans Horses, | |
(A thing most strange, and certaine) | |
Beauteous, and swift, the Minions of their Race, | |
Turn'd wilde in nature, broke their stalls, flong out, | |
Contending 'gainst Obedience, as they would | |
Make Warre with Mankinde | |
Old man. 'Tis said, they eate each other | |
Rosse. They did so: | |
To th' amazement of mine eyes that look'd vpon't. | |
Enter Macduffe. | |
Heere comes the good Macduffe. | |
How goes the world Sir, now? | |
Macd. Why see you not? | |
Ross. Is't known who did this more then bloody deed? | |
Macd. Those that Macbeth hath slaine | |
Ross. Alas the day, | |
What good could they pretend? | |
Macd. They were subborned, | |
Malcolme, and Donalbaine the Kings two Sonnes | |
Are stolne away and fled, which puts vpon them | |
Suspition of the deed | |
Rosse. 'Gainst Nature still, | |
Thriftlesse Ambition, that will rauen vp | |
Thine owne liues meanes: Then 'tis most like, | |
The Soueraignty will fall vpon Macbeth | |
Macd. He is already nam'd, and gone to Scone | |
To be inuested | |
Rosse. Where is Duncans body? | |
Macd. Carried to Colmekill, | |
The Sacred Store-house of his Predecessors, | |
And Guardian of their Bones | |
Rosse. Will you to Scone? | |
Macd. No Cosin, Ile to Fife | |
Rosse. Well, I will thither | |
Macd. Well may you see things wel done there: Adieu | |
Least our old Robes sit easier then our new | |
Rosse. Farewell, Father | |
Old M. Gods benyson go with you, and with those | |
That would make good of bad, and Friends of Foes. | |
Exeunt. omnes | |
Actus Tertius. Scena Prima. | |
Enter Banquo. | |
Banq. Thou hast it now, King, Cawdor, Glamis, all, | |
As the weyard Women promis'd, and I feare | |
Thou playd'st most fowly for't: yet it was saide | |
It should not stand in thy Posterity, | |
But that my selfe should be the Roote, and Father | |
Of many Kings. If there come truth from them, | |
As vpon thee Macbeth, their Speeches shine, | |
Why by the verities on thee made good, | |
May they not be my Oracles as well, | |
And set me vp in hope. But hush, no more. | |
Senit sounded. Enter Macbeth as King, Lady Lenox, Rosse, Lords, | |
and | |
Attendants. | |
Macb. Heere's our chiefe Guest | |
La. If he had beene forgotten, | |
It had bene as a gap in our great Feast, | |
And all-thing vnbecomming | |
Macb. To night we hold a solemne Supper sir, | |
And Ile request your presence | |
Banq. Let your Highnesse | |
Command vpon me, to the which my duties | |
Are with a most indissoluble tye | |
For euer knit | |
Macb. Ride you this afternoone? | |
Ban. I, my good Lord | |
Macb. We should haue else desir'd your good aduice | |
(Which still hath been both graue, and prosperous) | |
In this dayes Councell: but wee'le take to morrow. | |
Is't farre you ride? | |
Ban. As farre, my Lord, as will fill vp the time | |
'Twixt this, and Supper. Goe not my Horse the better, | |
I must become a borrower of the Night, | |
For a darke houre, or twaine | |
Macb. Faile not our Feast | |
Ban. My Lord, I will not | |
Macb. We heare our bloody Cozens are bestow'd | |
In England, and in Ireland, not confessing | |
Their cruell Parricide, filling their hearers | |
With strange inuention. But of that to morrow, | |
When therewithall, we shall haue cause of State, | |
Crauing vs ioyntly. Hye you to Horse: | |
Adieu, till you returne at Night. | |
Goes Fleance with you? | |
Ban. I, my good Lord: our time does call vpon's | |
Macb. I wish your Horses swift, and sure of foot: | |
And so I doe commend you to their backs. | |
Farwell. | |
Exit Banquo. | |
Let euery man be master of his time, | |
Till seuen at Night, to make societie | |
The sweeter welcome: | |
We will keepe our selfe till Supper time alone: | |
While then, God be with you. | |
Exeunt. Lords. | |
Sirrha, a word with you: Attend those men | |
Our pleasure? | |
Seruant. They are, my Lord, without the Pallace | |
Gate | |
Macb. Bring them before vs. | |
Exit Seruant. | |
To be thus, is nothing, but to be safely thus | |
Our feares in Banquo sticke deepe, | |
And in his Royaltie of Nature reignes that | |
Which would be fear'd. 'Tis much he dares, | |
And to that dauntlesse temper of his Minde, | |
He hath a Wisdome, that doth guide his Valour, | |
To act in safetie. There is none but he, | |
Whose being I doe feare: and vnder him, | |
My Genius is rebuk'd, as it is said | |
Mark Anthonies was by Caesar. He chid the Sisters, | |
When first they put the Name of King vpon me, | |
And bad them speake to him. Then Prophet-like, | |
They hayl'd him Father to a Line of Kings. | |
Vpon my Head they plac'd a fruitlesse Crowne, | |
And put a barren Scepter in my Gripe, | |
Thence to be wrencht with an vnlineall Hand, | |
No Sonne of mine succeeding: if't be so, | |
For Banquo's Issue haue I fil'd my Minde, | |
For them, the gracious Duncan haue I murther'd, | |
Put Rancours in the Vessell of my Peace | |
Onely for them, and mine eternall Iewell | |
Giuen to the common Enemie of Man, | |
To make them Kings, the Seedes of Banquo Kings. | |
Rather then so, come Fate into the Lyst, | |
And champion me to th' vtterance. | |
Who's there? | |
Enter Seruant, and two Murtherers. | |
Now goe to the Doore, and stay there till we call. | |
Exit Seruant. | |
Was it not yesterday we spoke together? | |
Murth. It was, so please your Highnesse | |
Macb. Well then, | |
Now haue you consider'd of my speeches: | |
Know, that it was he, in the times past, | |
Which held you so vnder fortune, | |
Which you thought had been our innocent selfe. | |
This I made good to you, in our last conference, | |
Past in probation with you: | |
How you were borne in hand, how crost: | |
The Instruments: who wrought with them: | |
And all things else, that might | |
To halfe a Soule, and to a Notion craz'd, | |
Say, Thus did Banquo | |
1.Murth. You made it knowne to vs | |
Macb. I did so: | |
And went further, which is now | |
Our point of second meeting. | |
Doe you finde your patience so predominant, | |
In your nature, that you can let this goe? | |
Are you so Gospell'd, to pray for this good man, | |
And for his Issue, whose heauie hand | |
Hath bow'd you to the Graue, and begger'd | |
Yours for euer? | |
1.Murth. We are men, my Liege | |
Macb. I, in the Catalogue ye goe for men, | |
As Hounds, and Greyhounds, Mungrels, Spaniels, Curres, | |
Showghes, Water-Rugs, and Demy-Wolues are clipt | |
All by the Name of Dogges: the valued file | |
Distinguishes the swift, the slow, the subtle, | |
The House-keeper, the Hunter, euery one | |
According to the gift, which bounteous Nature | |
Hath in him clos'd: whereby he does receiue | |
Particular addition, from the Bill, | |
That writes them all alike: and so of men. | |
Now, if you haue a station in the file, | |
Not i'th' worst ranke of Manhood, say't, | |
And I will put that Businesse in your Bosomes, | |
Whose execution takes your Enemie off, | |
Grapples you to the heart; and loue of vs, | |
Who weare our Health but sickly in his Life, | |
Which in his Death were perfect | |
2.Murth. I am one, my Liege, | |
Whom the vile Blowes and Buffets of the World | |
Hath so incens'd, that I am recklesse what I doe, | |
To spight the World | |
1.Murth. And I another, | |
So wearie with Disasters, tugg'd with Fortune, | |
That I would set my Life on any Chance, | |
To mend it, or be rid on't | |
Macb. Both of you know Banquo was your Enemie | |
Murth. True, my Lord | |
Macb. So is he mine: and in such bloody distance, | |
That euery minute of his being, thrusts | |
Against my neer'st of Life: and though I could | |
With bare-fac'd power sweepe him from my sight, | |
And bid my will auouch it; yet I must not, | |
For certaine friends that are both his, and mine, | |
Whose loues I may not drop, but wayle his fall, | |
Who I my selfe struck downe: and thence it is, | |
That I to your assistance doe make loue, | |
Masking the Businesse from the common Eye, | |
For sundry weightie Reasons | |
2.Murth. We shall, my Lord, | |
Performe what you command vs | |
1.Murth. Though our Liues- | |
Macb. Your Spirits shine through you. | |
Within this houre, at most, | |
I will aduise you where to plant your selues, | |
Acquaint you with the perfect Spy o'th' time, | |
The moment on't, for't must be done to Night, | |
And something from the Pallace: alwayes thought, | |
That I require a clearenesse; and with him, | |
To leaue no Rubs nor Botches in the Worke: | |
Fleans , his Sonne, that keepes him companie, | |
Whose absence is no lesse materiall to me, | |
Then is his Fathers, must embrace the fate | |
Of that darke houre: resolue your selues apart, | |
Ile come to you anon | |
Murth. We are resolu'd, my Lord | |
Macb. Ile call vpon you straight: abide within, | |
It is concluded: Banquo, thy Soules flight, | |
If it finde Heauen, must finde it out to Night. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Secunda. | |
Enter Macbeths Lady, and a Seruant. | |
Lady. Is Banquo gone from Court? | |
Seruant. I, Madame, but returnes againe to Night | |
Lady. Say to the King, I would attend his leysure, | |
For a few words | |
Seruant. Madame, I will. | |
Enter. | |
Lady. Nought's had, all's spent. | |
Where our desire is got without content: | |
'Tis safer, to be that which we destroy, | |
Then by destruction dwell in doubtfull ioy. | |
Enter Macbeth. | |
How now, my Lord, why doe you keepe alone? | |
Of sorryest Fancies your Companions making, | |
Vsing those Thoughts, which should indeed haue dy'd | |
With them they thinke on: things without all remedie | |
Should be without regard: what's done, is done | |
Macb. We haue scorch'd the Snake, not kill'd it: | |
Shee'le close, and be her selfe, whilest our poore Mallice | |
Remaines in danger of her former Tooth. | |
But let the frame of things dis-ioynt, | |
Both the Worlds suffer, | |
Ere we will eate our Meale in feare, and sleepe | |
In the affliction of these terrible Dreames, | |
That shake vs Nightly: Better be with the dead, | |
Whom we, to gayne our peace, haue sent to peace, | |
Then on the torture of the Minde to lye | |
In restlesse extasie. | |
Duncane is in his Graue: | |
After Lifes fitfull Feuer, he sleepes well, | |
Treason ha's done his worst: nor Steele, nor Poyson, | |
Mallice domestique, forraine Leuie, nothing, | |
Can touch him further | |
Lady. Come on: | |
Gentle my Lord, sleeke o're your rugged Lookes, | |
Be bright and Iouiall among your Guests to Night | |
Macb. So shall I Loue, and so I pray be you: | |
Let your remembrance apply to Banquo, | |
Present him Eminence, both with Eye and Tongue: | |
Vnsafe the while, that wee must laue | |
Our Honors in these flattering streames, | |
And make our Faces Vizards to our Hearts, | |
Disguising what they are | |
Lady. You must leaue this | |
Macb. O, full of Scorpions is my Minde, deare Wife: | |
Thou know'st, that Banquo and his Fleans liues | |
Lady. But in them, Natures Coppie's not eterne | |
Macb. There's comfort yet, they are assaileable, | |
Then be thou iocund: ere the Bat hath flowne | |
His Cloyster'd flight, ere to black Heccats summons | |
The shard-borne Beetle, with his drowsie hums, | |
Hath rung Nights yawning Peale, | |
There shall be done a deed of dreadfull note | |
Lady. What's to be done? | |
Macb. Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest Chuck, | |
Till thou applaud the deed: Come, seeling Night, | |
Skarfe vp the tender Eye of pittifull Day, | |
And with thy bloodie and inuisible Hand | |
Cancell and teare to pieces that great Bond, | |
Which keepes me pale. Light thickens, | |
And the Crow makes Wing toth' Rookie Wood: | |
Good things of Day begin to droope, and drowse, | |
Whiles Nights black Agents to their Prey's doe rowse. | |
Thou maruell'st at my words: but hold thee still, | |
Things bad begun, make strong themselues by ill: | |
So prythee goe with me. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Tertia. | |
Enter three Murtherers. | |
1. But who did bid thee ioyne with vs? | |
3. Macbeth | |
2. He needes not our mistrust, since he deliuers | |
Our Offices, and what we haue to doe, | |
To the direction iust | |
1. Then stand with vs: | |
The West yet glimmers with some streakes of Day. | |
Now spurres the lated Traueller apace, | |
To gayne the timely Inne, and neere approches | |
The subiect of our Watch | |
3. Hearke, I heare Horses | |
Banquo within. Giue vs a Light there, hoa | |
2. Then 'tis hee: | |
The rest, that are within the note of expectation, | |
Alreadie are i'th' Court | |
1. His Horses goe about | |
3. Almost a mile: but he does vsually, | |
So all men doe, from hence toth' Pallace Gate | |
Make it their Walke. | |
Enter Banquo and Fleans, with a Torch. | |
2. A Light, a Light | |
3. 'Tis hee | |
1. Stand too't | |
Ban. It will be Rayne to Night | |
1. Let it come downe | |
Ban. O, Trecherie! | |
Flye good Fleans, flye, flye, flye, | |
Thou may'st reuenge. O Slaue! | |
3. Who did strike out the Light? | |
1. Was't not the way? | |
3. There's but one downe: the Sonne is fled | |
2. We haue lost | |
Best halfe of our Affaire | |
1. Well, let's away, and say how much is done. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scaena Quarta. | |
Banquet prepar'd. Enter Macbeth, Lady, Rosse, Lenox, Lords, and | |
Attendants. | |
Macb. You know your owne degrees, sit downe: | |
At first and last, the hearty welcome | |
Lords. Thankes to your Maiesty | |
Macb. Our selfe will mingle with Society, | |
And play the humble Host: | |
Our Hostesse keepes her State, but in best time | |
We will require her welcome | |
La. Pronounce it for me Sir, to all our Friends, | |
For my heart speakes, they are welcome. | |
Enter first Murtherer. | |
Macb. See they encounter thee with their harts thanks | |
Both sides are euen: heere Ile sit i'th' mid'st, | |
Be large in mirth, anon wee'l drinke a Measure | |
The Table round. There's blood vpon thy face | |
Mur. 'Tis Banquo's then | |
Macb. 'Tis better thee without, then he within. | |
Is he dispatch'd? | |
Mur. My Lord his throat is cut, that I did for him | |
Mac. Thou art the best o'th' Cut-throats, | |
Yet hee's good that did the like for Fleans: | |
If thou did'st it, thou art the Non-pareill | |
Mur. Most Royall Sir | |
Fleans is scap'd | |
Macb. Then comes my Fit againe: | |
I had else beene perfect; | |
Whole as the Marble, founded as the Rocke, | |
As broad, and generall, as the casing Ayre: | |
But now I am cabin'd, crib'd, confin'd, bound in | |
To sawcy doubts, and feares. But Banquo's safe? | |
Mur. I, my good Lord: safe in a ditch he bides, | |
With twenty trenched gashes on his head; | |
The least a Death to Nature | |
Macb. Thankes for that: | |
There the growne Serpent lyes, the worme that's fled | |
Hath Nature that in time will Venom breed, | |
No teeth for th' present. Get thee gone, to morrow | |
Wee'l heare our selues againe. | |
Exit Murderer. | |
Lady. My Royall Lord, | |
You do not giue the Cheere, the Feast is sold | |
That is not often vouch'd, while 'tis a making: | |
'Tis giuen, with welcome: to feede were best at home: | |
From thence, the sawce to meate is Ceremony, | |
Meeting were bare without it. | |
Enter the Ghost of Banquo, and sits in Macbeths place. | |
Macb. Sweet Remembrancer: | |
Now good digestion waite on Appetite, | |
And health on both | |
Lenox. May't please your Highnesse sit | |
Macb. Here had we now our Countries Honor, roof'd, | |
Were the grac'd person of our Banquo present: | |
Who, may I rather challenge for vnkindnesse, | |
Then pitty for Mischance | |
Rosse. His absence (Sir) | |
Layes blame vpon his promise. Pleas't your Highnesse | |
To grace vs with your Royall Company? | |
Macb. The Table's full | |
Lenox. Heere is a place reseru'd Sir | |
Macb. Where? | |
Lenox. Heere my good Lord. | |
What is't that moues your Highnesse? | |
Macb. Which of you haue done this? | |
Lords. What, my good Lord? | |
Macb. Thou canst not say I did it: neuer shake | |
Thy goary lockes at me | |
Rosse. Gentlemen rise, his Highnesse is not well | |
Lady. Sit worthy Friends: my Lord is often thus, | |
And hath beene from his youth. Pray you keepe Seat, | |
The fit is momentary, vpon a thought | |
He will againe be well. If much you note him | |
You shall offend him, and extend his Passion, | |
Feed, and regard him not. Are you a man? | |
Macb. I, and a bold one, that dare looke on that | |
Which might appall the Diuell | |
La. O proper stuffe: | |
This is the very painting of your feare: | |
This is the Ayre-drawne-Dagger which you said | |
Led you to Duncan. O, these flawes and starts | |
(Impostors to true feare) would well become | |
A womans story, at a Winters fire | |
Authoriz'd by her Grandam: shame it selfe, | |
Why do you make such faces? When all's done | |
You looke but on a stoole | |
Macb. Prythee see there: | |
Behold, looke, loe, how say you: | |
Why what care I, if thou canst nod, speake too. | |
If Charnell houses, and our Graues must send | |
Those that we bury, backe; our Monuments | |
Shall be the Mawes of Kytes | |
La. What? quite vnmann'd in folly | |
Macb. If I stand heere, I saw him | |
La. Fie for shame | |
Macb. Blood hath bene shed ere now, i'th' olden time | |
Ere humane Statute purg'd the gentle Weale: | |
I, and since too, Murthers haue bene perform'd | |
Too terrible for the eare. The times has bene, | |
That when the Braines were out, the man would dye, | |
And there an end: But now they rise againe | |
With twenty mortall murthers on their crownes, | |
And push vs from our stooles. This is more strange | |
Then such a murther is | |
La. My worthy Lord | |
Your Noble Friends do lacke you | |
Macb. I do forget: | |
Do not muse at me my most worthy Friends, | |
I haue a strange infirmity, which is nothing | |
To those that know me. Come, loue and health to all, | |
Then Ile sit downe: Giue me some Wine, fill full: | |
Enter Ghost. | |
I drinke to th' generall ioy o'th' whole Table, | |
And to our deere Friend Banquo, whom we misse: | |
Would he were heere: to all, and him we thirst, | |
And all to all | |
Lords. Our duties, and the pledge | |
Mac. Auant, & quit my sight, let the earth hide thee: | |
Thy bones are marrowlesse, thy blood is cold: | |
Thou hast no speculation in those eyes | |
Which thou dost glare with | |
La. Thinke of this good Peeres | |
But as a thing of Custome: 'Tis no other, | |
Onely it spoyles the pleasure of the time | |
Macb. What man dare, I dare: | |
Approach thou like the rugged Russian Beare, | |
The arm'd Rhinoceros, or th' Hircan Tiger, | |
Take any shape but that, and my firme Nerues | |
Shall neuer tremble. Or be aliue againe, | |
And dare me to the Desart with thy Sword: | |
If trembling I inhabit then, protest mee | |
The Baby of a Girle. Hence horrible shadow, | |
Vnreall mock'ry hence. Why so, being gone | |
I am a man againe: pray you sit still | |
La. You haue displac'd the mirth, | |
Broke the good meeting, with most admir'd disorder | |
Macb. Can such things be, | |
And ouercome vs like a Summers Clowd, | |
Without our speciall wonder? You make me strange | |
Euen to the disposition that I owe, | |
When now I thinke you can behold such sights, | |
And keepe the naturall Rubie of your Cheekes, | |
When mine is blanch'd with feare | |
Rosse. What sights, my Lord? | |
La. I pray you speake not: he growes worse & worse | |
Question enrages him: at once, goodnight. | |
Stand not vpon the order of your going, | |
But go at once | |
Len. Good night, and better health | |
Attend his Maiesty | |
La. A kinde goodnight to all. | |
Exit Lords. | |
Macb. It will haue blood they say: | |
Blood will haue Blood: | |
Stones haue beene knowne to moue, & Trees to speake: | |
Augures, and vnderstood Relations, haue | |
By Maggot Pyes, & Choughes, & Rookes brought forth | |
The secret'st man of Blood. What is the night? | |
La. Almost at oddes with morning, which is which | |
Macb. How say'st thou that Macduff denies his person | |
At our great bidding | |
La. Did you send to him Sir? | |
Macb. I heare it by the way: But I will send: | |
There's not a one of them but in his house | |
I keepe a Seruant Feed. I will to morrow | |
(And betimes I will) to the weyard Sisters. | |
More shall they speake: for now I am bent to know | |
By the worst meanes, the worst, for mine owne good, | |
All causes shall giue way. I am in blood | |
Stept in so farre, that should I wade no more, | |
Returning were as tedious as go ore: | |
Strange things I haue in head, that will to hand, | |
Which must be acted, ere they may be scand | |
La. You lacke the season of all Natures, sleepe | |
Macb. Come, wee'l to sleepe: My strange & self-abuse | |
Is the initiate feare, that wants hard vse: | |
We are yet but yong indeed. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Quinta. | |
Thunder. Enter the three Witches, meeting Hecat. | |
1. Why how now Hecat, you looke angerly? | |
Hec. Haue I not reason (Beldams) as you are? | |
Sawcy, and ouer-bold, how did you dare | |
To Trade, and Trafficke with Macbeth, | |
In Riddles, and Affaires of death; | |
And I the Mistris of your Charmes, | |
The close contriuer of all harmes, | |
Was neuer call'd to beare my part, | |
Or shew the glory of our Art? | |
And which is worse, all you haue done | |
Hath bene but for a wayward Sonne, | |
Spightfull, and wrathfull, who (as others do) | |
Loues for his owne ends, not for you. | |
But make amends now: Get you gon, | |
And at the pit of Acheron | |
Meete me i'th' Morning: thither he | |
Will come, to know his Destinie. | |
Your Vessels, and your Spels prouide, | |
Your Charmes, and euery thing beside; | |
I am for th' Ayre: This night Ile spend | |
Vnto a dismall, and a Fatall end. | |
Great businesse must be wrought ere Noone. | |
Vpon the Corner of the Moone | |
There hangs a vap'rous drop, profound, | |
Ile catch it ere it come to ground; | |
And that distill'd by Magicke slights, | |
Shall raise such Artificiall Sprights, | |
As by the strength of their illusion, | |
Shall draw him on to his Confusion. | |
He shall spurne Fate, scorne Death, and beare | |
His hopes 'boue Wisedome, Grace, and Feare: | |
And you all know, Security | |
Is Mortals cheefest Enemie. | |
Musicke, and a Song. | |
Hearke, I am call'd: my little Spirit see | |
Sits in Foggy cloud, and stayes for me. | |
Sing within. Come away, come away, &c. | |
1 Come, let's make hast, shee'l soone be | |
Backe againe. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scaena Sexta. | |
Enter Lenox, and another Lord. | |
Lenox. My former Speeches, | |
Haue but hit your Thoughts | |
Which can interpret farther: Onely I say | |
Things haue bin strangely borne. The gracious Duncan | |
Was pittied of Macbeth: marry he was dead: | |
And the right valiant Banquo walk'd too late, | |
Whom you may say (if't please you) Fleans kill'd, | |
For Fleans fled: Men must not walke too late. | |
Who cannot want the thought, how monstrous | |
It was for Malcolme, and for Donalbane | |
To kill their gracious Father? Damned Fact, | |
How it did greeue Macbeth? Did he not straight | |
In pious rage, the two delinquents teare, | |
That were the Slaues of drinke, and thralles of sleepe? | |
Was not that Nobly done? I, and wisely too: | |
For 'twould haue anger'd any heart aliue | |
To heare the men deny't. So that I say, | |
He ha's borne all things well, and I do thinke, | |
That had he Duncans Sonnes vnder his Key, | |
(As, and't please Heauen he shall not) they should finde | |
What 'twere to kill a Father: So should Fleans. | |
But peace; for from broad words, and cause he fayl'd | |
His presence at the Tyrants Feast, I heare | |
Macduffe liues in disgrace. Sir, can you tell | |
Where he bestowes himselfe? | |
Lord. The Sonnes of Duncane | |
(From whom this Tyrant holds the due of Birth) | |
Liues in the English Court, and is receyu'd | |
Of the most Pious Edward, with such grace, | |
That the maleuolence of Fortune, nothing | |
Takes from his high respect. Thither Macduffe | |
Is gone, to pray the Holy King, vpon his ayd | |
To wake Northumberland, and warlike Seyward, | |
That by the helpe of these (with him aboue) | |
To ratifie the Worke) we may againe | |
Giue to our Tables meate, sleepe to our Nights: | |
Free from our Feasts, and Banquets bloody kniues; | |
Do faithfull Homage, and receiue free Honors, | |
All which we pine for now. And this report | |
Hath so exasperate their King, that hee | |
Prepares for some attempt of Warre | |
Len. Sent he to Macduffe? | |
Lord. He did: and with an absolute Sir, not I | |
The clowdy Messenger turnes me his backe, | |
And hums; as who should say, you'l rue the time | |
That clogges me with this Answer | |
Lenox. And that well might | |
Aduise him to a Caution, t' hold what distance | |
His wisedome can prouide. Some holy Angell | |
Flye to the Court of England, and vnfold | |
His Message ere he come, that a swift blessing | |
May soone returne to this our suffering Country, | |
Vnder a hand accurs'd | |
Lord. Ile send my Prayers with him. | |
Exeunt. | |
Actus Quartus. Scena Prima. | |
Thunder. Enter the three Witches. | |
1 Thrice the brinded Cat hath mew'd | |
2 Thrice, and once the Hedge-Pigge whin'd | |
3 Harpier cries, 'tis time, 'tis time | |
1 Round about the Caldron go: | |
In the poysond Entrailes throw | |
Toad, that vnder cold stone, | |
Dayes and Nights, ha's thirty one: | |
Sweltred Venom sleeping got, | |
Boyle thou first i'th' charmed pot | |
All. Double, double, toile and trouble; | |
Fire burne, and Cauldron bubble | |
2 Fillet of a Fenny Snake, | |
In the Cauldron boyle and bake: | |
Eye of Newt, and Toe of Frogge, | |
Wooll of Bat, and Tongue of Dogge: | |
Adders Forke, and Blinde-wormes Sting, | |
Lizards legge, and Howlets wing: | |
For a Charme of powrefull trouble, | |
Like a Hell-broth, boyle and bubble | |
All. Double, double, toyle and trouble, | |
Fire burne, and Cauldron bubble | |
3 Scale of Dragon, Tooth of Wolfe, | |
Witches Mummey, Maw, and Gulfe | |
Of the rauin'd salt Sea sharke: | |
Roote of Hemlocke, digg'd i'th' darke: | |
Liuer of Blaspheming Iew, | |
Gall of Goate, and Slippes of Yew, | |
Sliuer'd in the Moones Ecclipse: | |
Nose of Turke, and Tartars lips: | |
Finger of Birth-strangled Babe, | |
Ditch-deliuer'd by a Drab, | |
Make the Grewell thicke, and slab. | |
Adde thereto a Tigers Chawdron, | |
For th' Ingredience of our Cawdron | |
All. Double, double, toyle and trouble, | |
Fire burne, and Cauldron bubble | |
2 Coole it with a Baboones blood, | |
Then the Charme is firme and good. | |
Enter Hecat, and the other three Witches. | |
Hec. O well done: I commend your paines, | |
And euery one shall share i'th' gaines: | |
And now about the Cauldron sing | |
Like Elues and Fairies in a Ring, | |
Inchanting all that you put in. | |
Musicke and a Song. Blacke Spirits, &c. | |
2 By the pricking of my Thumbes, | |
Something wicked this way comes: | |
Open Lockes, who euer knockes. | |
Enter Macbeth. | |
Macb. How now you secret, black, & midnight Hags? | |
What is't you do? | |
All. A deed without a name | |
Macb. I coniure you, by that which you Professe, | |
(How ere you come to know it) answer me: | |
Though you vntye the Windes, and let them fight | |
Against the Churches: Though the yesty Waues | |
Confound and swallow Nauigation vp: | |
Though bladed Corne be lodg'd, & Trees blown downe, | |
Though Castles topple on their Warders heads: | |
Though Pallaces, and Pyramids do slope | |
Their heads to their Foundations: Though the treasure | |
Of Natures Germaine, tumble altogether, | |
Euen till destruction sicken: Answer me | |
To what I aske you | |
1 Speake | |
2 Demand | |
3 Wee'l answer | |
1 Say, if th'hadst rather heare it from our mouthes, | |
Or from our Masters | |
Macb. Call 'em: let me see 'em | |
1 Powre in Sowes blood, that hath eaten | |
Her nine Farrow: Greaze that's sweaten | |
From the Murderers Gibbet, throw | |
Into the Flame | |
All. Come high or low: | |
Thy Selfe and Office deaftly show. | |
Thunder. 1. Apparation, an Armed Head. | |
Macb. Tell me, thou vnknowne power | |
1 He knowes thy thought: | |
Heare his speech, but say thou nought | |
1 Appar. Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth: | |
Beware Macduffe, | |
Beware the Thane of Fife: dismisse me. Enough. | |
He Descends. | |
Macb. What ere thou art, for thy good caution, thanks | |
Thou hast harp'd my feare aright. But one word more | |
1 He will not be commanded: heere's another | |
More potent then the first. | |
Thunder. 2 Apparition, a Bloody Childe. | |
2 Appar. Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth | |
Macb. Had I three eares, Il'd heare thee | |
Appar. Be bloody, bold, & resolute: | |
Laugh to scorne | |
The powre of man: For none of woman borne | |
Shall harme Macbeth. | |
Descends. | |
Mac. Then liue Macduffe: what need I feare of thee? | |
But yet Ile make assurance: double sure, | |
And take a Bond of Fate: thou shalt not liue, | |
That I may tell pale-hearted Feare, it lies; | |
And sleepe in spight of Thunder. | |
Thunder 3 Apparation, a Childe Crowned, with a Tree in his hand. | |
What is this, that rises like the issue of a King, | |
And weares vpon his Baby-brow, the round | |
And top of Soueraignty? | |
All. Listen, but speake not too't | |
3 Appar. Be Lyon metled, proud, and take no care: | |
Who chafes, who frets, or where Conspirers are: | |
Macbeth shall neuer vanquish'd be, vntill | |
Great Byrnam Wood, to high Dunsmane Hill | |
Shall come against him. | |
Descend. | |
Macb. That will neuer bee: | |
Who can impresse the Forrest, bid the Tree | |
Vnfixe his earth-bound Root? Sweet boadments, good: | |
Rebellious dead, rise neuer till the Wood | |
Of Byrnan rise, and our high plac'd Macbeth | |
Shall liue the Lease of Nature, pay his breath | |
To time, and mortall Custome. Yet my Hart | |
Throbs to know one thing: Tell me, if your Art | |
Can tell so much: Shall Banquo's issue euer | |
Reigne in this Kingdome? | |
All. Seeke to know no more | |
Macb. I will be satisfied. Deny me this, | |
And an eternall Curse fall on you: Let me know. | |
Why sinkes that Caldron? & what noise is this? | |
Hoboyes | |
1 Shew | |
2 Shew | |
3 Shew | |
All. Shew his Eyes, and greeue his Hart, | |
Come like shadowes, so depart. | |
A shew of eight Kings, and Banquo last, with a glasse in his hand. | |
Macb. Thou art too like the Spirit of Banquo: Down: | |
Thy Crowne do's seare mine Eye-bals. And thy haire | |
Thou other Gold-bound-brow, is like the first: | |
A third, is like the former. Filthy Hagges, | |
Why do you shew me this? - A fourth? Start eyes! | |
What will the Line stretch out to'th' cracke of Doome? | |
Another yet? A seauenth? Ile see no more: | |
And yet the eighth appeares, who beares a glasse, | |
Which shewes me many more: and some I see, | |
That two-fold Balles, and trebble Scepters carry. | |
Horrible sight: Now I see 'tis true, | |
For the Blood-bolter'd Banquo smiles vpon me, | |
And points at them for his. What? is this so? | |
1 I Sir, all this is so. But why | |
Stands Macbeth thus amazedly? | |
Come Sisters, cheere we vp his sprights, | |
And shew the best of our delights. | |
Ile Charme the Ayre to giue a sound, | |
While you performe your Antique round: | |
That this great King may kindly say, | |
Our duties, did his welcome pay. | |
Musicke. The Witches Dance, and vanish. | |
Macb. Where are they? Gone? | |
Let this pernitious houre, | |
Stand aye accursed in the Kalender. | |
Come in, without there. | |
Enter Lenox. | |
Lenox. What's your Graces will | |
Macb. Saw you the Weyard Sisters? | |
Lenox. No my Lord | |
Macb. Came they not by you? | |
Lenox. No indeed my Lord | |
Macb. Infected be the Ayre whereon they ride, | |
And damn'd all those that trust them. I did heare | |
The gallopping of Horse. Who was't came by? | |
Len. 'Tis two or three my Lord, that bring you word: | |
Macduff is fled to England | |
Macb. Fled to England? | |
Len. I, my good Lord | |
Macb. Time, thou anticipat'st my dread exploits: | |
The flighty purpose neuer is o're-tooke | |
Vnlesse the deed go with it. From this moment, | |
The very firstlings of my heart shall be | |
The firstlings of my hand. And euen now | |
To Crown my thoughts with Acts: be it thoght & done: | |
The Castle of Macduff, I will surprize. | |
Seize vpon Fife; giue to th' edge o'th' Sword | |
His Wife, his Babes, and all vnfortunate Soules | |
That trace him in his Line. No boasting like a Foole, | |
This deed Ile do, before this purpose coole, | |
But no more sights. Where are these Gentlemen? | |
Come bring me where they are. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Secunda. | |
Enter Macduffes Wife, her Son, and Rosse. | |
Wife. What had he done, to make him fly the Land? | |
Rosse. You must haue patience Madam | |
Wife. He had none: | |
His flight was madnesse: when our Actions do not, | |
Our feares do make vs Traitors | |
Rosse. You know not | |
Whether it was his wisedome, or his feare | |
Wife. Wisedom? to leaue his wife, to leaue his Babes, | |
His Mansion, and his Titles, in a place | |
From whence himselfe do's flye? He loues vs not, | |
He wants the naturall touch. For the poore Wren | |
(The most diminitiue of Birds) will fight, | |
Her yong ones in her Nest, against the Owle: | |
All is the Feare, and nothing is the Loue; | |
As little is the Wisedome, where the flight | |
So runnes against all reason | |
Rosse. My deerest Cooz, | |
I pray you schoole your selfe. But for your Husband, | |
He is Noble, Wise, Iudicious, and best knowes | |
The fits o'th' Season. I dare not speake much further, | |
But cruell are the times, when we are Traitors | |
And do not know our selues: when we hold Rumor | |
From what we feare, yet know not what we feare, | |
But floate vpon a wilde and violent Sea | |
Each way, and moue. I take my leaue of you: | |
Shall not be long but Ile be heere againe: | |
Things at the worst will cease, or else climbe vpward, | |
To what they were before. My pretty Cosine, | |
Blessing vpon you | |
Wife. Father'd he is, | |
And yet hee's Father-lesse | |
Rosse. I am so much a Foole, should I stay longer | |
It would be my disgrace, and your discomfort. | |
I take my leaue at once. | |
Exit Rosse. | |
Wife. Sirra, your Fathers dead, | |
And what will you do now? How will you liue? | |
Son. As Birds do Mother | |
Wife. What with Wormes, and Flyes? | |
Son. With what I get I meane, and so do they | |
Wife. Poore Bird, | |
Thou'dst neuer Feare the Net, nor Lime, | |
The Pitfall, nor the Gin | |
Son. Why should I Mother? | |
Poore Birds they are not set for: | |
My Father is not dead for all your saying | |
Wife. Yes, he is dead: | |
How wilt thou do for a Father? | |
Son. Nay how will you do for a Husband? | |
Wife. Why I can buy me twenty at any Market | |
Son. Then you'l by 'em to sell againe | |
Wife. Thou speak'st withall thy wit, | |
And yet I'faith with wit enough for thee | |
Son. Was my Father a Traitor, Mother? | |
Wife. I, that he was | |
Son. What is a Traitor? | |
Wife. Why one that sweares, and lyes | |
Son. And be all Traitors, that do so | |
Wife. Euery one that do's so, is a Traitor, | |
And must be hang'd | |
Son. And must they all be hang'd, that swear and lye? | |
Wife. Euery one | |
Son. Who must hang them? | |
Wife. Why, the honest men | |
Son. Then the Liars and Swearers are Fools: for there | |
are Lyars and Swearers enow, to beate the honest men, | |
and hang vp them | |
Wife. Now God helpe thee, poore Monkie: | |
But how wilt thou do for a Father? | |
Son. If he were dead, youl'd weepe for him: if you | |
would not, it were a good signe, that I should quickely | |
haue a new Father | |
Wife. Poore pratler, how thou talk'st? | |
Enter a Messenger. | |
Mes. Blesse you faire Dame: I am not to you known, | |
Though in your state of Honor I am perfect; | |
I doubt some danger do's approach you neerely. | |
If you will take a homely mans aduice, | |
Be not found heere: Hence with your little ones | |
To fright you thus. Me thinkes I am too sauage: | |
To do worse to you, were fell Cruelty, | |
Which is too nie your person. Heauen preserue you, | |
I dare abide no longer. | |
Exit Messenger | |
Wife. Whether should I flye? | |
I haue done no harme. But I remember now | |
I am in this earthly world: where to do harme | |
Is often laudable, to do good sometime | |
Accounted dangerous folly. Why then (alas) | |
Do I put vp that womanly defence, | |
To say I haue done no harme? | |
What are these faces? | |
Enter Murtherers. | |
Mur. Where is your Husband? | |
Wife. I hope in no place so vnsanctified, | |
Where such as thou may'st finde him | |
Mur. He's a Traitor | |
Son. Thou ly'st thou shagge-ear'd Villaine | |
Mur. What you Egge? | |
Yong fry of Treachery? | |
Son. He ha's kill'd me Mother, | |
Run away I pray you. | |
Exit crying Murther. | |
Scaena Tertia. | |
Enter Malcolme and Macduffe. | |
Mal. Let vs seeke out some desolate shade, & there | |
Weepe our sad bosomes empty | |
Macd. Let vs rather | |
Hold fast the mortall Sword: and like good men, | |
Bestride our downfall Birthdome: each new Morne, | |
New Widdowes howle, new Orphans cry, new sorowes | |
Strike heauen on the face, that it resounds | |
As if it felt with Scotland, and yell'd out | |
Like Syllable of Dolour | |
Mal. What I beleeue, Ile waile; | |
What know, beleeue; and what I can redresse, | |
As I shall finde the time to friend: I wil. | |
What you haue spoke, it may be so perchance. | |
This Tyrant, whose sole name blisters our tongues, | |
Was once thought honest: you haue lou'd him well, | |
He hath not touch'd you yet. I am yong, but something | |
You may discerne of him through me, and wisedome | |
To offer vp a weake, poore innocent Lambe | |
T' appease an angry God | |
Macd. I am not treacherous | |
Malc. But Macbeth is. | |
A good and vertuous Nature may recoyle | |
In an Imperiall charge. But I shall craue your pardon: | |
That which you are, my thoughts cannot transpose; | |
Angels are bright still, though the brightest fell. | |
Though all things foule, would wear the brows of grace | |
Yet Grace must still looke so | |
Macd. I haue lost my Hopes | |
Malc. Perchance euen there | |
Where I did finde my doubts. | |
Why in that rawnesse left you Wife, and Childe? | |
Those precious Motiues, those strong knots of Loue, | |
Without leaue-taking. I pray you, | |
Let not my Iealousies, be your Dishonors, | |
But mine owne Safeties: you may be rightly iust, | |
What euer I shall thinke | |
Macd. Bleed, bleed poore Country, | |
Great Tyrrany, lay thou thy basis sure, | |
For goodnesse dare not check thee: wear y thy wrongs, | |
The Title, is affear'd. Far thee well Lord, | |
I would not be the Villaine that thou think'st, | |
For the whole Space that's in the Tyrants Graspe, | |
And the rich East to boot | |
Mal. Be not offended: | |
I speake not as in absolute feare of you: | |
I thinke our Country sinkes beneath the yoake, | |
It weepes, it bleeds, and each new day a gash | |
Is added to her wounds. I thinke withall, | |
There would be hands vplifted in my right: | |
And heere from gracious England haue I offer | |
Of goodly thousands. But for all this, | |
When I shall treade vpon the Tyrants head, | |
Or weare it on my Sword; yet my poore Country | |
Shall haue more vices then it had before, | |
More suffer, and more sundry wayes then euer, | |
By him that shall succeede | |
Macd. What should he be? | |
Mal. It is my selfe I meane: in whom I know | |
All the particulars of Vice so grafted, | |
That when they shall be open'd, blacke Macbeth | |
Will seeme as pure as Snow, and the poore State | |
Esteeme him as a Lambe, being compar'd | |
With my confinelesse harmes | |
Macd. Not in the Legions | |
Of horrid Hell, can come a Diuell more damn'd | |
In euils, to top Macbeth | |
Mal. I grant him Bloody, | |
Luxurious, Auaricious, False, Deceitfull, | |
Sodaine, Malicious, smacking of euery sinne | |
That ha's a name. But there's no bottome, none | |
In my Voluptuousnesse: Your Wiues, your Daughters, | |
Your Matrons, and your Maides, could not fill vp | |
The Cesterne of my Lust, and my Desire | |
All continent Impediments would ore-beare | |
That did oppose my will. Better Macbeth, | |
Then such an one to reigne | |
Macd. Boundlesse intemperance | |
In Nature is a Tyranny: It hath beene | |
Th' vntimely emptying of the happy Throne, | |
And fall of many Kings. But feare not yet | |
To take vpon you what is yours: you may | |
Conuey your pleasures in a spacious plenty, | |
And yet seeme cold. The time you may so hoodwinke: | |
We haue willing Dames enough: there cannot be | |
That Vulture in you, to deuoure so many | |
As will to Greatnesse dedicate themselues, | |
Finding it so inclinde | |
Mal. With this, there growes | |
In my most ill-composd Affection, such | |
A stanchlesse Auarice, that were I King, | |
I should cut off the Nobles for their Lands, | |
Desire his Iewels, and this others House, | |
And my more-hauing, would be as a Sawce | |
To make me hunger more, that I should forge | |
Quarrels vniust against the Good and Loyall, | |
Destroying them for wealth | |
Macd. This Auarice | |
stickes deeper: growes with more pernicious roote | |
Then Summer-seeming Lust: and it hath bin | |
The Sword of our slaine Kings: yet do not feare, | |
Scotland hath Foysons, to fill vp your will | |
Of your meere Owne. All these are portable, | |
With other Graces weigh'd | |
Mal. But I haue none. The King-becoming Graces, | |
As Iustice, Verity, Temp'rance, Stablenesse, | |
Bounty, Perseuerance, Mercy, Lowlinesse, | |
Deuotion, Patience, Courage, Fortitude, | |
I haue no rellish of them, but abound | |
In the diuision of each seuerall Crime, | |
Acting it many wayes. Nay, had I powre, I should | |
Poure the sweet Milke of Concord, into Hell, | |
Vprore the vniuersall peace, confound | |
All vnity on earth | |
Macd. O Scotland, Scotland | |
Mal. If such a one be fit to gouerne, speake: | |
I am as I haue spoken | |
Mac. Fit to gouern? No not to liue. O Natio[n] miserable! | |
With an vntitled Tyrant, bloody Sceptred, | |
When shalt thou see thy wholsome dayes againe? | |
Since that the truest Issue of thy Throne | |
By his owne Interdiction stands accust, | |
And do's blaspheme his breed? Thy Royall Father | |
Was a most Sainted-King: the Queene that bore thee, | |
Oftner vpon her knees, then on her feet, | |
Dy'de euery day she liu'd. Fare thee well, | |
These Euils thou repeat'st vpon thy selfe, | |
Hath banish'd me from Scotland. O my Brest, | |
Thy hope ends heere | |
Mal. Macduff, this Noble passion | |
Childe of integrity, hath from my soule | |
Wip'd the blacke Scruples, reconcil'd my thoughts | |
To thy good Truth, and Honor. Diuellish Macbeth, | |
By many of these traines, hath sought to win me | |
Into his power: and modest Wisedome pluckes me | |
From ouer-credulous hast: but God aboue | |
Deale betweene thee and me; For euen now | |
I put my selfe to thy Direction, and | |
Vnspeake mine owne detraction. Heere abiure | |
The taints, and blames I laide vpon my selfe, | |
For strangers to my Nature. I am yet | |
Vnknowne to Woman, neuer was forsworne, | |
Scarsely haue coueted what was mine owne. | |
At no time broke my Faith, would not betray | |
The Deuill to his Fellow, and delight | |
No lesse in truth then life. My first false speaking | |
Was this vpon my selfe. What I am truly | |
Is thine, and my poore Countries to command: | |
Whither indeed, before they heere approach | |
Old Seyward with ten thousand warlike men | |
Already at a point, was setting foorth: | |
Now wee'l together, and the chance of goodnesse | |
Be like our warranted Quarrell. Why are you silent? | |
Macd. Such welcome, and vnwelcom things at once | |
'Tis hard to reconcile. | |
Enter a Doctor. | |
Mal. Well, more anon. Comes the King forth | |
I pray you? | |
Doct. I Sir: there are a crew of wretched Soules | |
That stay his Cure: their malady conuinces | |
The great assay of Art. But at his touch, | |
Such sanctity hath Heauen giuen his hand, | |
They presently amend. | |
Enter. | |
Mal. I thanke you Doctor | |
Macd. What's the Disease he meanes? | |
Mal. Tis call'd the Euill. | |
A most myraculous worke in this good King, | |
Which often since my heere remaine in England, | |
I haue seene him do: How he solicites heauen | |
Himselfe best knowes: but strangely visited people | |
All swolne and Vlcerous, pittifull to the eye, | |
The meere dispaire of Surgery, he cures, | |
Hanging a golden stampe about their neckes, | |
Put on with holy Prayers, and 'tis spoken | |
To the succeeding Royalty he leaues | |
The healing Benediction. With this strange vertue, | |
He hath a heauenly guift of Prophesie, | |
And sundry Blessings hang about his Throne, | |
That speake him full of Grace. | |
Enter Rosse. | |
Macd. See who comes heere | |
Malc. My Countryman: but yet I know him not | |
Macd. My euer gentle Cozen, welcome hither | |
Malc. I know him now. Good God betimes remoue | |
The meanes that makes vs Strangers | |
Rosse. Sir, Amen | |
Macd. Stands Scotland where it did? | |
Rosse. Alas poore Countrey, | |
Almost affraid to know it selfe. It cannot | |
Be call'd our Mother, but our Graue; where nothing | |
But who knowes nothing, is once seene to smile: | |
Where sighes, and groanes, and shrieks that rent the ayre | |
Are made, not mark'd: Where violent sorrow seemes | |
A Moderne extasie: The Deadmans knell, | |
Is there scarse ask'd for who, and good mens liues | |
Expire before the Flowers in their Caps, | |
Dying, or ere they sicken | |
Macd. Oh Relation; too nice, and yet too true | |
Malc. What's the newest griefe? | |
Rosse. That of an houres age, doth hisse the speaker, | |
Each minute teemes a new one | |
Macd. How do's my Wife? | |
Rosse. Why well | |
Macd. And all my Children? | |
Rosse. Well too | |
Macd. The Tyrant ha's not batter'd at their peace? | |
Rosse. No, they were wel at peace, when I did leaue 'em | |
Macd. Be not a niggard of your speech: How gos't? | |
Rosse. When I came hither to transport the Tydings | |
Which I haue heauily borne, there ran a Rumour | |
Of many worthy Fellowes, that were out, | |
Which was to my beleefe witnest the rather, | |
For that I saw the Tyrants Power a-foot. | |
Now is the time of helpe: your eye in Scotland | |
Would create Soldiours, make our women fight, | |
To doffe their dire distresses | |
Malc. Bee't their comfort | |
We are comming thither: Gracious England hath | |
Lent vs good Seyward, and ten thousand men, | |
An older, and a better Souldier, none | |
That Christendome giues out | |
Rosse. Would I could answer | |
This comfort with the like. But I haue words | |
That would be howl'd out in the desert ayre, | |
Where hearing should not latch them | |
Macd. What concerne they, | |
The generall cause, or is it a Fee-griefe | |
Due to some single brest? | |
Rosse. No minde that's honest | |
But in it shares some woe, though the maine part | |
Pertaines to you alone | |
Macd. If it be mine | |
Keepe it not from me, quickly let me haue it | |
Rosse. Let not your eares dispise my tongue for euer, | |
Which shall possesse them with the heauiest sound | |
that euer yet they heard | |
Macd. Humh: I guesse at it | |
Rosse. Your Castle is surpriz'd: your Wife, and Babes | |
Sauagely slaughter'd: To relate the manner | |
Were on the Quarry of these murther'd Deere | |
To adde the death of you | |
Malc. Mercifull Heauen: | |
What man, ne're pull your hat vpon your browes: | |
Giue sorrow words; the griefe that do's not speake, | |
Whispers the o're-fraught heart, and bids it breake | |
Macd. My Children too? | |
Ro. Wife, Children, Seruants, all that could be found | |
Macd. And I must be from thence? My wife kil'd too? | |
Rosse. I haue said | |
Malc. Be comforted. | |
Let's make vs Med'cines of our great Reuenge, | |
To cure this deadly greefe | |
Macd. He ha's no Children. All my pretty ones? | |
Did you say All? Oh Hell-Kite! All? | |
What, All my pretty Chickens, and their Damme | |
At one fell swoope? | |
Malc. Dispute it like a man | |
Macd. I shall do so: | |
But I must also feele it as a man; | |
I cannot but remember such things were | |
That were most precious to me: Did heauen looke on, | |
And would not take their part? Sinfull Macduff, | |
They were all strooke for thee: Naught that I am, | |
Not for their owne demerits, but for mine | |
Fell slaughter on their soules: Heauen rest them now | |
Mal. Be this the Whetstone of your sword, let griefe | |
Conuert to anger: blunt not the heart, enrage it | |
Macd. O I could play the woman with mine eyes, | |
And Braggart with my tongue. But gentle Heauens, | |
Cut short all intermission: Front to Front, | |
Bring thou this Fiend of Scotland, and my selfe | |
Within my Swords length set him, if he scape | |
Heauen forgiue him too | |
Mal. This time goes manly: | |
Come go we to the King, our Power is ready, | |
Our lacke is nothing but our leaue. Macbeth | |
Is ripe for shaking, and the Powres aboue | |
Put on their Instruments: Receiue what cheere you may, | |
The Night is long, that neuer findes the Day. | |
Exeunt. | |
Actus Quintus. Scena Prima. | |
Enter a Doctor of Physicke, and a Wayting Gentlewoman. | |
Doct. I haue too Nights watch'd with you, but can | |
perceiue no truth in your report. When was it shee last | |
walk'd? | |
Gent. Since his Maiesty went into the Field, I haue | |
seene her rise from her bed, throw her Night-Gown vppon | |
her, vnlocke her Closset, take foorth paper, folde it, | |
write vpon't, read it, afterwards Seale it, and againe returne | |
to bed; yet all this while in a most fast sleepe | |
Doct. A great perturbation in Nature, to receyue at | |
once the benefit of sleep, and do the effects of watching. | |
In this slumbry agitation, besides her walking, and other | |
actuall performances, what (at any time) haue you heard | |
her say? | |
Gent. That Sir, which I will not report after her | |
Doct. You may to me, and 'tis most meet you should | |
Gent. Neither to you, nor any one, hauing no witnesse | |
to confirme my speech. | |
Enter Lady, with a Taper. | |
Lo you, heere she comes: This is her very guise, and vpon | |
my life fast asleepe: obserue her, stand close | |
Doct. How came she by that light? | |
Gent. Why it stood by her: she ha's light by her continually, | |
'tis her command | |
Doct. You see her eyes are open | |
Gent. I, but their sense are shut | |
Doct. What is it she do's now? | |
Looke how she rubbes her hands | |
Gent. It is an accustom'd action with her, to seeme | |
thus washing her hands: I haue knowne her continue in | |
this a quarter of an houre | |
Lad. Yet heere's a spot | |
Doct. Heark, she speaks, I will set downe what comes | |
from her, to satisfie my remembrance the more strongly | |
La. Out damned spot: out I say. One: Two: Why | |
then 'tis time to doo't: Hell is murky. Fye, my Lord, fie, | |
a Souldier, and affear'd? what need we feare? who knowes | |
it, when none can call our powre to accompt: yet who | |
would haue thought the olde man to haue had so much | |
blood in him | |
Doct. Do you marke that? | |
Lad. The Thane of Fife, had a wife: where is she now? | |
What will these hands ne're be cleane? No more o'that | |
my Lord, no more o'that: you marre all with this starting | |
Doct. Go too, go too: | |
You haue knowne what you should not | |
Gent. She ha's spoke what shee should not, I am sure | |
of that: Heauen knowes what she ha's knowne | |
La. Heere's the smell of the blood still: all the perfumes | |
of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand. | |
Oh, oh, oh | |
Doct. What a sigh is there? The hart is sorely charg'd | |
Gent. I would not haue such a heart in my bosome, | |
for the dignity of the whole body | |
Doct. Well, well, well | |
Gent. Pray God it be sir | |
Doct. This disease is beyond my practise: yet I haue | |
knowne those which haue walkt in their sleep, who haue | |
dyed holily in their beds | |
Lad. Wash your hands, put on your Night-Gowne, | |
looke not so pale: I tell you yet againe Banquo's buried; | |
he cannot come out on's graue | |
Doct. Euen so? | |
Lady. To bed, to bed: there's knocking at the gate: | |
Come, come, come, come, giue me your hand: What's | |
done, cannot be vndone. To bed, to bed, to bed. | |
Exit Lady. | |
Doct. Will she go now to bed? | |
Gent. Directly | |
Doct. Foule whisp'rings are abroad: vnnaturall deeds | |
Do breed vnnaturall troubles: infected mindes | |
To their deafe pillowes will discharge their Secrets: | |
More needs she the Diuine, then the Physitian: | |
God, God forgiue vs all. Looke after her, | |
Remoue from her the meanes of all annoyance, | |
And still keepe eyes vpon her: So goodnight, | |
My minde she ha's mated, and amaz'd my sight. | |
I thinke, but dare not speake | |
Gent. Good night good Doctor. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Secunda. | |
Drum and Colours. Enter Menteth, Cathnes, Angus, Lenox, | |
Soldiers. | |
Ment. The English powre is neere, led on by Malcolm, | |
His Vnkle Seyward, and the good Macduff. | |
Reuenges burne in them: for their deere causes | |
Would to the bleeding, and the grim Alarme | |
Excite the mortified man | |
Ang. Neere Byrnan wood | |
Shall we well meet them, that way are they comming | |
Cath. Who knowes if Donalbane be with his brother? | |
Len. For certaine Sir, he is not: I haue a File | |
Of all the Gentry; there is Seywards Sonne, | |
And many vnruffe youths, that euen now | |
Protest their first of Manhood | |
Ment. What do's the Tyrant | |
Cath. Great Dunsinane he strongly Fortifies: | |
Some say hee's mad: Others, that lesser hate him, | |
Do call it valiant Fury, but for certaine | |
He cannot buckle his distemper'd cause | |
Within the belt of Rule | |
Ang. Now do's he feele | |
His secret Murthers sticking on his hands, | |
Now minutely Reuolts vpbraid his Faith-breach: | |
Those he commands, moue onely in command, | |
Nothing in loue: Now do's he feele his Title | |
Hang loose about him, like a Giants Robe | |
Vpon a dwarfish Theefe | |
Ment. Who then shall blame | |
His pester'd Senses to recoyle, and start, | |
When all that is within him, do's condemne | |
It selfe, for being there | |
Cath. Well, march we on, | |
To giue Obedience, where 'tis truly ow'd: | |
Meet we the Med'cine of the sickly Weale, | |
And with him poure we in our Countries purge, | |
Each drop of vs | |
Lenox. Or so much as it needes, | |
To dew the Soueraigne Flower, and drowne the Weeds: | |
Make we our March towards Birnan. | |
Exeunt. marching. | |
Scaena Tertia. | |
Enter Macbeth, Doctor, and Attendants. | |
Macb. Bring me no more Reports, let them flye all: | |
Till Byrnane wood remoue to Dunsinane, | |
I cannot taint with Feare. What's the Boy Malcolme? | |
Was he not borne of woman? The Spirits that know | |
All mortall Consequences, haue pronounc'd me thus: | |
Feare not Macbeth, no man that's borne of woman | |
Shall ere haue power vpon thee. Then fly false Thanes, | |
And mingle with the English Epicures, | |
The minde I sway by, and the heart I beare, | |
Shall neuer sagge with doubt, nor shake with feare. | |
Enter Seruant. | |
The diuell damne thee blacke, thou cream-fac'd Loone: | |
Where got'st thou that Goose-looke | |
Ser. There is ten thousand | |
Macb. Geese Villaine? | |
Ser. Souldiers Sir | |
Macb. Go pricke thy face, and ouer-red thy feare | |
Thou Lilly-liuer'd Boy. What Soldiers, Patch? | |
Death of thy Soule, those Linnen cheekes of thine | |
Are Counsailers to feare. What Soldiers Whay-face? | |
Ser. The English Force, so please you | |
Macb. Take thy face hence. Seyton, I am sick at hart, | |
When I behold: Seyton, I say, this push | |
Will cheere me euer, or dis-eate me now. | |
I haue liu'd long enough: my way of life | |
Is falne into the Seare, the yellow Leafe, | |
And that which should accompany Old-Age, | |
As Honor, Loue, Obedience, Troopes of Friends, | |
I must not looke to haue: but in their steed, | |
Curses, not lowd but deepe, Mouth-honor, breath | |
Which the poore heart would faine deny, and dare not. | |
Seyton? | |
Enter Seyton. | |
Sey. What's your gracious pleasure? | |
Macb. What Newes more? | |
Sey. All is confirm'd my Lord, which was reported | |
Macb. Ile fight, till from my bones, my flesh be hackt. | |
Giue me my Armor | |
Seyt. 'Tis not needed yet | |
Macb. Ile put it on: | |
Send out moe Horses, skirre the Country round, | |
Hang those that talke of Feare. Giue me mine Armor: | |
How do's your Patient, Doctor? | |
Doct. Not so sicke my Lord, | |
As she is troubled with thicke-comming Fancies | |
That keepe her from her rest | |
Macb. Cure of that: | |
Can'st thou not Minister to a minde diseas'd, | |
Plucke from the Memory a rooted Sorrow, | |
Raze out the written troubles of the Braine, | |
And with some sweet Obliuious Antidote | |
Cleanse the stufft bosome, of that perillous stuffe | |
Which weighes vpon the heart? | |
Doct. Therein the Patient | |
Must minister to himselfe | |
Macb. Throw Physicke to the Dogs, Ile none of it. | |
Come, put mine Armour on: giue me my Staffe: | |
Seyton, send out: Doctor, the Thanes flye from me: | |
Come sir, dispatch. If thou could'st Doctor, cast | |
The Water of my Land, finde her Disease, | |
And purge it to a sound and pristine Health, | |
I would applaud thee to the very Eccho, | |
That should applaud againe. Pull't off I say, | |
What Rubarb, Cyme, or what Purgatiue drugge | |
Would scowre these English hence: hear'st y of them? | |
Doct. I my good Lord: your Royall Preparation | |
Makes vs heare something | |
Macb. Bring it after me: | |
I will not be affraid of Death and Bane, | |
Till Birnane Forrest come to Dunsinane | |
Doct. Were I from Dunsinane away, and cleere, | |
Profit againe should hardly draw me heere. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Quarta. | |
Drum and Colours. Enter Malcolme, Seyward, Macduffe, | |
Seywards Sonne, | |
Menteth, Cathnes, Angus, and Soldiers Marching. | |
Malc. Cosins, I hope the dayes are neere at hand | |
That Chambers will be safe | |
Ment. We doubt it nothing | |
Seyw. What wood is this before vs? | |
Ment. The wood of Birnane | |
Malc. Let euery Souldier hew him downe a Bough, | |
And bear't before him, thereby shall we shadow | |
The numbers of our Hoast, and make discouery | |
Erre in report of vs | |
Sold. It shall be done | |
Syw. We learne no other, but the confident Tyrant | |
Keepes still in Dunsinane, and will indure | |
Our setting downe befor't | |
Malc. 'Tis his maine hope: | |
For where there is aduantage to be giuen, | |
Both more and lesse haue giuen him the Reuolt, | |
And none serue with him, but constrained things, | |
Whose hearts are absent too | |
Macd. Let our iust Censures | |
Attend the true euent, and put we on | |
Industrious Souldiership | |
Sey. The time approaches, | |
That will with due decision make vs know | |
What we shall say we haue, and what we owe: | |
Thoughts speculatiue, their vnsure hopes relate, | |
But certaine issue, stroakes must arbitrate, | |
Towards which, aduance the warre. | |
Exeunt. marching | |
Scena Quinta. | |
Enter Macbeth, Seyton, & Souldiers, with Drum and Colours. | |
Macb. Hang out our Banners on the outward walls, | |
The Cry is still, they come: our Castles strength | |
Will laugh a Siedge to scorne: Heere let them lye, | |
Till Famine and the Ague eate them vp: | |
Were they not forc'd with those that should be ours, | |
We might haue met them darefull, beard to beard, | |
And beate them backward home. What is that noyse? | |
A Cry within of Women. | |
Sey. It is the cry of women, my good Lord | |
Macb. I haue almost forgot the taste of Feares: | |
The time ha's beene, my sences would haue cool'd | |
To heare a Night-shrieke, and my Fell of haire | |
Would at a dismall Treatise rowze, and stirre | |
As life were in't. I haue supt full with horrors, | |
Direnesse familiar to my slaughterous thoughts | |
Cannot once start me. Wherefore was that cry? | |
Sey. The Queene (my Lord) is dead | |
Macb. She should haue dy'de heereafter; | |
There would haue beene a time for such a word: | |
To morrow, and to morrow, and to morrow, | |
Creepes in this petty pace from day to day, | |
To the last Syllable of Recorded time: | |
And all our yesterdayes, haue lighted Fooles | |
The way to dusty death. Out, out, breefe Candle, | |
Life's but a walking Shadow, a poore Player, | |
That struts and frets his houre vpon the Stage, | |
And then is heard no more. It is a Tale | |
Told by an Ideot, full of sound and fury | |
Signifying nothing. | |
Enter a Messenger. | |
Thou com'st to vse thy Tongue: thy Story quickly | |
Mes. Gracious my Lord, | |
I should report that which I say I saw, | |
But know not how to doo't | |
Macb. Well, say sir | |
Mes. As I did stand my watch vpon the Hill | |
I look'd toward Byrnane, and anon me thought | |
The Wood began to moue | |
Macb. Lyar, and Slaue | |
Mes. Let me endure your wrath, if't be not so: | |
Within this three Mile may you see it comming. | |
I say, a mouing Groue | |
Macb. If thou speak'st false, | |
Vpon the next Tree shall thou hang aliue | |
Till Famine cling thee: If thy speech be sooth, | |
I care not if thou dost for me as much. | |
I pull in Resolution, and begin | |
To doubt th' Equiuocation of the Fiend, | |
That lies like truth. Feare not, till Byrnane Wood | |
Do come to Dunsinane, and now a Wood | |
Comes toward Dunsinane. Arme, Arme, and out, | |
If this which he auouches, do's appeare, | |
There is nor flying hence, nor tarrying here. | |
I 'ginne to be a-weary of the Sun, | |
And wish th' estate o'th' world were now vndon. | |
Ring the Alarum Bell, blow Winde, come wracke, | |
At least wee'l dye with Harnesse on our backe. | |
Exeunt. | |
Scena Sexta. | |
Drumme and Colours. Enter Malcolme, Seyward, Macduffe, and | |
their Army, | |
with Boughes. | |
Mal. Now neere enough: | |
Your leauy Skreenes throw downe, | |
And shew like those you are: You (worthy Vnkle) | |
Shall with my Cosin your right Noble Sonne | |
Leade our first Battell. Worthy Macduffe, and wee | |
Shall take vpon's what else remaines to do, | |
According to our order | |
Sey. Fare you well: | |
Do we but finde the Tyrants power to night, | |
Let vs be beaten, if we cannot fight | |
Macd. Make all our Trumpets speak, giue the[m] all breath | |
Those clamorous Harbingers of Blood, & Death. | |
Exeunt. | |
Alarums continued. | |
Scena Septima. | |
Enter Macbeth. | |
Macb. They haue tied me to a stake, I cannot flye, | |
But Beare-like I must fight the course. What's he | |
That was not borne of Woman? Such a one | |
Am I to feare, or none. | |
Enter young Seyward. | |
Y.Sey. What is thy name? | |
Macb. Thou'lt be affraid to heare it | |
Y.Sey. No: though thou call'st thy selfe a hoter name | |
Then any is in hell | |
Macb. My name's Macbeth | |
Y.Sey. The diuell himselfe could not pronounce a Title | |
More hatefull to mine eare | |
Macb. No: nor more fearefull | |
Y.Sey. Thou lyest abhorred Tyrant, with my Sword | |
Ile proue the lye thou speak'st. | |
Fight, and young Seyward slaine. | |
Macb. Thou was't borne of woman; | |
But Swords I smile at, Weapons laugh to scorne, | |
Brandish'd by man that's of a Woman borne. | |
Enter. | |
Alarums. Enter Macduffe. | |
Macd. That way the noise is: Tyrant shew thy face, | |
If thou beest slaine, and with no stroake of mine, | |
My Wife and Childrens Ghosts will haunt me still: | |
I cannot strike at wretched Kernes, whose armes | |
Are hyr'd to beare their Staues; either thou Macbeth, | |
Or else my Sword with an vnbattered edge | |
I sheath againe vndeeded. There thou should'st be, | |
By this great clatter, one of greatest note | |
Seemes bruited. Let me finde him Fortune, | |
And more I begge not. | |
Exit. Alarums. | |
Enter Malcolme and Seyward. | |
Sey. This way my Lord, the Castles gently rendred: | |
The Tyrants people, on both sides do fight, | |
The Noble Thanes do brauely in the Warre, | |
The day almost it selfe professes yours, | |
And little is to do | |
Malc. We haue met with Foes | |
That strike beside vs | |
Sey. Enter Sir, the Castle. | |
Exeunt. Alarum | |
Enter Macbeth. | |
Macb. Why should I play the Roman Foole, and dye | |
On mine owne sword? whiles I see liues, the gashes | |
Do better vpon them. | |
Enter Macduffe. | |
Macd. Turne Hell-hound, turne | |
Macb. Of all men else I haue auoyded thee: | |
But get thee backe, my soule is too much charg'd | |
With blood of thine already | |
Macd. I haue no words, | |
My voice is in my Sword, thou bloodier Villaine | |
Then tearmes can giue thee out. | |
Fight: Alarum | |
Macb. Thou loosest labour | |
As easie may'st thou the intrenchant Ayre | |
With thy keene Sword impresse, as make me bleed: | |
Let fall thy blade on vulnerable Crests, | |
I beare a charmed Life, which must not yeeld | |
To one of woman borne | |
Macd. Dispaire thy Charme, | |
And let the Angell whom thou still hast seru'd | |
Tell thee, Macduffe was from his Mothers womb | |
Vntimely ript | |
Macb. Accursed be that tongue that tels mee so; | |
For it hath Cow'd my better part of man: | |
And be these Iugling Fiends no more beleeu'd, | |
That palter with vs in a double sence, | |
That keepe the word of promise to our eare, | |
And breake it to our hope. Ile not fight with thee | |
Macd. Then yeeld thee Coward, | |
And liue to be the shew, and gaze o'th' time. | |
Wee'l haue thee, as our rarer Monsters are | |
Painted vpon a pole, and vnder-writ, | |
Heere may you see the Tyrant | |
Macb. I will not yeeld | |
To kisse the ground before young Malcolmes feet, | |
And to be baited with the Rabbles curse. | |
Though Byrnane wood be come to Dunsinane, | |
And thou oppos'd, being of no woman borne, | |
Yet I will try the last. Before my body, | |
I throw my warlike Shield: Lay on Macduffe, | |
And damn'd be him, that first cries hold, enough. | |
Exeunt. fighting. Alarums. | |
Enter Fighting, and Macbeth slaine. | |
Retreat, and Flourish. Enter with Drumme and Colours, Malcolm, | |
Seyward, | |
Rosse, Thanes, & Soldiers. | |
Mal. I would the Friends we misse, were safe arriu'd | |
Sey. Some must go off: and yet by these I see, | |
So great a day as this is cheapely bought | |
Mal. Macduffe is missing, and your Noble Sonne | |
Rosse. Your son my Lord, ha's paid a souldiers debt, | |
He onely liu'd but till he was a man, | |
The which no sooner had his Prowesse confirm'd | |
In the vnshrinking station where he fought, | |
But like a man he dy'de | |
Sey. Then he is dead? | |
Rosse. I, and brought off the field: your cause of sorrow | |
Must not be measur'd by his worth, for then | |
It hath no end | |
Sey. Had he his hurts before? | |
Rosse. I, on the Front | |
Sey. Why then, Gods Soldier be he: | |
Had I as many Sonnes, as I haue haires, | |
I would not wish them to a fairer death: | |
And so his Knell is knoll'd | |
Mal. Hee's worth more sorrow, | |
and that Ile spend for him | |
Sey. He's worth no more, | |
They say he parted well, and paid his score, | |
And so God be with him. Here comes newer comfort. | |
Enter Macduffe, with Macbeths head. | |
Macd. Haile King, for so thou art. | |
Behold where stands | |
Th' Vsurpers cursed head: the time is free: | |
I see thee compast with thy Kingdomes Pearle, | |
That speake my salutation in their minds: | |
Whose voyces I desire alowd with mine. | |
Haile King of Scotland | |
All. Haile King of Scotland. | |
Flourish. | |
Mal. We shall not spend a large expence of time, | |
Before we reckon with your seuerall loues, | |
And make vs euen with you. My Thanes and Kinsmen | |
Henceforth be Earles, the first that euer Scotland | |
In such an Honor nam'd: What's more to do, | |
Which would be planted newly with the time, | |
As calling home our exil'd Friends abroad, | |
That fled the Snares of watchfull Tyranny, | |
Producing forth the cruell Ministers | |
Of this dead Butcher, and his Fiend-like Queene; | |
Who (as 'tis thought) by selfe and violent hands, | |
Tooke off her life. This, and what need full else | |
That call's vpon vs, by the Grace of Grace, | |
We will performe in measure, time, and place: | |
So thankes to all at once, and to each one, | |
Whom we inuite, to see vs Crown'd at Scone. | |
Flourish. Exeunt Omnes. | |
FINIS. THE TRAGEDIE OF MACBETH. |