MACBETH
MACBETH
When a person is asked to tell the story of Macbeth, he can
tell two stories. One is of a man called Macbeth who came to the throne of
Scotland by a crime in the year of our Lord 1039, and reigned justly and well,
on the whole, for fifteen years or more. This story is part of Scottish
history. The other story issues from a place called Imagination; it is gloomy
and wonderful, and you shall hear it.
A year or two before Edward the Confessor began to rule
England, a battle was won in Scotland against a Norwegian King by two generals
named Macbeth and Banquo. After the battle, the generals walked together
towards Forres, in Elginshire, where Duncan, King of Scotland, was awaiting
them.
While they were crossing a lonely heath, they saw three
bearded women, sisters, hand in hand, withered in appearance and wild in their
attire.
"Speak, who are you?" demanded Macbeth.
"Hail, Macbeth, chieftain of Glamis," said the
first woman.
"Hail, Macbeth, chieftain of Cawdor," said the
second woman.
"Hail, Macbeth, King that is to be," said the
third woman.
Then Banquo asked, "What of me?" and the third
woman replied, "Thou shalt be the father of kings."
"Tell me more," said Macbeth. "By my father's
death I am chieftain of Glamis, but the chieftain of Cawdor lives, and the King
lives, and his children live. Speak, I charge you!"
The women replied only by vanishing, as though suddenly mixed
with the air.
Banquo and Macbeth knew then that they had been addressed by
witches, and were discussing their prophecies when two nobles approached. One
of them thanked Macbeth, in the King's name, for his military services, and the
other said, "He bade me call you chieftain of Cawdor."
Macbeth then learned that the man who had yesterday borne
that title was to die for treason, and he could not help thinking, "The
third witch called me, 'King that is to be.'"
"Banquo," he said, "you see that the witches
spoke truth concerning me. Do you not believe, therefore, that your child and
grandchild will be kings?"
Banquo frowned. Duncan had two sons, Malcolm and Donalbain,
and he deemed it disloyal to hope that his son Fleance should rule Scotland. He
told Macbeth that the witches might have intended to tempt them both into
villainy by their prophecies concerning the throne. Macbeth, however, thought
the prophecy that he should be King too pleasant to keep to himself, and he
mentioned it to his wife in a letter.
Lady Macbeth was the grand-daughter of a King of Scotland
who had died in defending his crown against the King who preceded Duncan, and
by whose order her only brother was slain. To her, Duncan was a reminder of
bitter wrongs. Her husband had royal blood in his veins, and when she read his
letter, she was determined that he should be King.
When a messenger arrived to inform her that Duncan would
pass a night in Macbeth's castle, she nerved herself for a very base action.
She told Macbeth almost as soon as she saw him that Duncan
must spend a sunless morrow. She meant that Duncan must die, and that the dead
are blind. "We will speak further," said Macbeth uneasily, and at
night, with his memory full of Duncan's kind words, he would fain have spared
his guest.
"Would you live a coward?" demanded Lady Macbeth,
who seems to have thought that morality and cowardice were the same.
"I dare do all that may become a man," replied
Macbeth; "who dare do more is none."
" Why did you write that letter to me?" she
inquired fiercely, and with bitter words she egged him on to murder, and with
cunning words she showed him how to do it.
After supper Duncan went to bed, and two grooms were placed
on guard at his bedroom door. Lady Macbeth caused them to drink wine till they
were stupefied. She then took their daggers and would have killed the King
herself if his sleeping face had not looked like her father's.
Macbeth came later, and found the daggers lying by the
grooms; and soon with red hands he appeared before his wife, saying,
"Methought I heard a voice cry, 'Sleep no more! Macbeth destroys the
sleeping.'"
"Wash your hands," said she. "Why did you not
leave the daggers by the grooms? Take them back, and smear the grooms with
blood."
"I dare not," said Macbeth.
His wife dared, and she returned to him with hands red as
his own, but a heart less white, she proudly told him, for she scorned his
fear.
The murderers heard a knocking, and Macbeth wished it was a
knocking which could wake the dead. It was the knocking of Macduff, the
chieftain of Fife, who had been told by Duncan to visit him early. Macbeth went
to him, and showed him the door of the King's room.
Macduff entered, and came out again crying, "O horror!
horror! horror!"
Macbeth appeared as horror-stricken as Macduff, and
pretending that he could not bear to see life in Duncan's murderers, he slew
the two grooms with their own daggers before they could proclaim their
innocence.
These murders did not shriek out, and Macbeth was crowned at
Scone. One of Duncan's sons went to Ireland, the other to England. Macbeth was
King. But he was discontented. The prophecy concerning Banquo oppressed his
mind. If Fleance were to rule, a son of Macbeth would not rule. Macbeth
determined, therefore, to murder both Banquo and his son. He hired two
ruffians, who slew Banquo one night when he was on his way with Fleance to a
banquet which Macbeth was giving to his nobles. Fleance escaped.
Meanwhile Macbeth and his Queen received their guests very
graciously, and he expressed a wish for them which has been uttered thousands
of times since his day--"Now good digestion wait on appetite, and health
on both."
"We pray your Majesty to sit with us," said
Lennox, a Scotch noble; but ere Macbeth could reply, the ghost of Banquo
entered the banqueting hall and sat in Macbeth's place.
Not noticing the ghost, Macbeth observed that, if Banquo
were present, he could say that he had collected under his roof the choicest
chivalry of Scotland. Macduff, however, had curtly declined his invitation.
The King was again pressed to take a seat, and Lennox, to
whom Banquo's ghost was invisible, showed him the chair where it sat.
But Macbeth, with his eyes of genius, saw the ghost. He saw
it like a form of mist and blood, and he demanded passionately, "Which of
you have done this?"
Still none saw the ghost but he, and to the ghost Macbeth
said, "Thou canst not say I did it."
The ghost glided out, and Macbeth was impudent enough to
raise a glass of wine "to the general joy of the whole table, and to our
dear friend Banquo, whom we miss."
The toast was drunk as the ghost of Banquo entered for the
second time.
"Begone!" cried Macbeth. "You are senseless,
mindless! Hide in the earth, thou horrible shadow."
Again none saw the ghost but he.
"What is it your Majesty sees?" asked one of the
nobles.
The Queen dared not permit an answer to be given to this
question. She hurriedly begged her guests to quit a sick man who was likely to
grow worse if he was obliged to talk.
Macbeth, however, was well enough next day to converse with
the witches whose prophecies had so depraved him.
He found them in a cavern on a thunderous day. They were
revolving round a cauldron in which were boiling particles of many strange and
horrible creatures, and they knew he was coming before he arrived.
"Answer me what I ask you," said the King.
"Would you rather hear it from us or our masters?"
asked the first witch.
"Call them," replied Macbeth.
Thereupon the witches poured blood into the cauldron and
grease into the flame that licked it, and a helmeted head appeared with the
visor on, so that Macbeth could only see its eyes.
He was speaking to the head, when the first witch said
gravely, "He knows thy thought," and a voice in the head said,
"Macbeth, beware Macduff, the chieftain of Fife." The head then
descended Into the cauldron till it disappeared.
"One word more," pleaded Macbeth.
"He will not be commanded," said the first witch,
and then a crowned child ascended from the cauldron bearing a tree in his hand
The child said--
"Macbeth shall be unconquerable till
The Wood of Birnam climbs Dunsinane Hill."
"That will never be," said Macbeth; and he asked
to be told if Banquo's descendants would ever rule Scotland.
The cauldron sank into the earth; music was heard, and a
procession of phantom kings filed past Macbeth; behind them was Banquo's ghost.
In each king, Macbeth saw a likeness to Banquo, and he counted eight kings.
Then he was suddenly left alone.
His next proceeding was to send murderers to Macduff's
castle. They did not find Macduff, and asked Lady Macduff where he was. She
gave a stinging answer, and her questioner called Macduff a traitor. "Thou
liest!" shouted Macduff's little son, who was immediately stabbed, and
with his last breath entreated his mother to fly. The murderers did not leave
the castle while one of its inmates remained alive.
Macduff was in England listening, with Malcolm, to a
doctor's tale of cures wrought by Edward the Confessor when his friend Ross
came to tell him that his wife and children were no more. At first Ross dared
not speak the truth, and turn Macduff's bright sympathy with sufferers relieved
by royal virtue into sorrow and hatred. But when Malcolm said that England was
sending an army into Scotland against Macbeth, Ross blurted out his news, and
Macduff cried, "All dead, did you say? All my pretty ones and their
mother? Did you say all?"
His sorry hope was in revenge, but if he could have looked
into Macbeth's castle on Dunsinane Hill, he would have seen at work a force
more solemn than revenge. Retribution was working, for Lady Macbeth was mad.
She walked in her sleep amid ghastly dreams. She was wont to wash her hands for
a quarter of an hour at a time; but after all her washing, would still see a
red spot of blood upon her skin. It was pitiful to hear her cry that all the
perfumes of Arabia could not sweeten her little hand.
"Canst thou not minister to a mind diseased?"
inquired Macbeth of the doctor, but the doctor replied that his patient must
minister to her own mind. This reply gave Macbeth a scorn of medicine.
"Throw physic to the dogs," he said; "I'll none of it."
One day he heard a sound of women crying. An officer
approached him and said, "The Queen, your Majesty, is dead."
"Out, brief candle," muttered Macbeth, meaning that life was like a
candle, at the mercy of a puff of air. He did not weep; he was too familiar
with death.
Presently a messenger told him that he saw Birnam Wood on
the march. Macbeth called him a liar and a slave, and threatened to hang him if
he had made a mistake. "If you are right you can hang me," he said.
From the turret windows of Dunsinane Castle, Birnam Wood did
indeed appear to be marching. Every soldier of the English army held aloft a
bough which he had cut from a tree in that wood, and like human trees they
climbed Dunsinane Hill.
Macbeth had still his courage. He went to battle to conquer
or die, and the first thing he did was to kill the English general's son in
single combat. Macbeth then felt that no man could fight him and live, and when
Macduff came to him blazing for revenge, Macbeth said to him, "Go back; I
have spilt too much of your blood already."
"My voice is in my sword," replied Macduff, and
hacked at him and bade him yield.
"I will not yield!" said Macbeth, but his last hour
had struck. He fell.
Macbeth's men were in retreat when Macduff came before
Malcolm holding a King's head by the hair.
"Hail, King!" he said; and the new King looked at
the old.
So Malcolm reigned after Macbeth; but in years that came
afterwards the descendants of Banquo were kings.