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3. WITCH. All hail, Macbeth! that shalt be king

hereafter.

BAN. Good fir, why do you ftart; and feem to
fear

Things that do found fo fair?-I'the name of truth,
Are ye fantastical, or that indeed

Which outwardly ye fhow? My noble partner
You greet with prefent grace, and great prediction
Of noble having, 3 and of royal hope,

thane of Glamis !] The thane fhip of Glamis was the ancient inheritance of Macbeth's family. The caftle where they lived is ftill ftanding, and was lately the magnificent refidence of the earl of Strathmore. See a particular defcription of it in Mr. Gray's letter to Dr. Wharton, dated from Glames Castle. STEEVENS.

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thane of Cawdor!] Dr. Johnfon obferves in his Journey to the Western lands of Scotland, that part of Calder Castle, from which Macbeth drew his fecond title, is ftill remaining.

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STEEVENS.

Are ye fantaftical,] By fantastical is not meant, according to the common fignification, creatures of his own brain; for he could not be fo extravagant to ask such a question: but it is used for fu pernatural, fpiritual. WARBURTON.

By fantaftical, he means creatures of fantasy or imagination: the queftion is, Are these real beings before us, or are we deceived by illufions of fancy? JOHNSON.

So, in Reginald Scott's Difcovery of Witchcraft, 1584: "He affirmeth these transubstantiations to be but fantaftical, not according to the veritie, but according to the appearance." expreffion occurs in All's Loft by Luft, 1633, by Rowley:

or is that thing,

Which would fupply the place of foul in thee, "Merely phantaftical?

The fame

Shakspeare, however, took the word from Holinfhed, who in his account of the witches, fays; "This was reputed at firft but fome vain fantastical illufion by Macbeth and Banquo."

STEEVENS.

3 Of noble having,] Having is eftate, poffeffion, fortune. So, in Twelfth Night :.

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my having is not much;

"I'll make divifion of my present ftore:
"Hold; there is half my

coffer."

VOL. XI.

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That he feems rapt withal; to me you speak not: If you can look into the feeds of time,

And fay, which grain will grow, and which will not; Speak then to me, who neither beg, nor fear, Your favours, nor you hate.

1. WITCH. Hail!
2. WITCH. Hail!
3. WITCH. Hail!

1. WITCH. Leffer than Macbeth, and greater.
2. WITCH. Not fo happy, yet much happier.
3. WITCH. Thou shalt get kings, though thou
be none:

So, all hail, Macbeth and Banquo!

1. WITCH. Banquo, and Macbeth, all hail! MACB. Stay, you imperfect fpeakers, tell me

more:

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By Sinel's death, I know, I am thane of Glamis;
But how of Cawdor? the thane of Cawdor lives,
A profperous gentleman; and to be king,

Again, in the ancient metrical romance of Syr Bevys of Hampton, bl. 1. no date :

"And when he heareth this tydinge,

"He will go theder with great having."

See also note on The Merry Wives of Windfor, A& III. sc. ii.

STEEVENS.

That he feems rapt withal ] Rapt is rapturously affe&ed, extra

fe raptus. So, in Spenfer's Faerie Queen, IV. ix. 6:

That, with the fweetnefs of her rare delight, "The prince half rapt, began on her to dote."

Again, in Cymbeline:

"What, dear fir, thus raps you?"

6 By Sinel's death,] The father of Macbeth.

STEEVENS.

POPE.

His true name, which however appears, but perhaps only typographically, corrupted to Synele in Hector Boethius, from whom, by means of his old Scottish tranflator, it came to the knowledge of Holinthed, was Finleg. Both Finlay and Macbeath are common furnames in Scotland at this moment. RITSON.

Stands not within the profpect of belief,
No more than to be Cawdor. Say, from whence
You owe this ftrange intelligence? or why

Upon this blafled heath you ftop our way

With fuch prophetick greeting?-Speak, I charge [Witches vanish.

you.

BAN. The earth hath bubbles, as the water has, And these are of them: Whither are they vanifh'd? MACB. Into the air; and what feem'd corporal,

melted

As breath into the wind.-'Would they had ftaid!
BAN. Were fuch things here, as we do fpeak
about?

Or have we eaten of the infane root,"
That takes the reafon prifoner?

7 eaten of the infane root,] The insane root is the root which makes infane. THEOBALD.

Shakspeare alludes to the qualities anciently afcribed to hemlock. So, in Greene's Never too late, 1616: * You gaz'd against the fun, and so blemished your fight; or else you have eaten of the roots of hemlock, that makes men's eyes conceit unfeen objects." Again, in Ben Jonfon's Sejanus:

66 they lay that hold upon thy fenfes,

"As thou hadft fauft up hemlock." STEEVENS.

In

The commentators have given themselves much trouble to ascertain the name of this root, but its name was, I believe, unknown to Shakspeare, as it is to his readers; Sir Thomas North's tranflation of Plutarch, having probably furnished him with the only knowledge he had of its qualities, without fpecifying its name. the Life of Antony, (which our author must have diligently read,) the Roman foldiers, while employed in the Parthian war, are faid to have fuffered great distress for want of provisions." In the ende (fays Plutarch) they were compelled to live of herbs and rootes, but they found few of them that men do commonly eate of, and were enforced to tafle of them that were never eaten before; among the which there was one that killed them, and made them out of their wits; for he that had once eaten of it, his memorye was gone from him, and he knew no manner of thing, but only bufied himself in

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MACB. Your children shall be kings.

BAN.

You fhall be king.

MACB. And thane of Cawdor too; went it not

fo ?

BAN. To the felf-fame tune, and words. Who's here?

Enter ROSSE, and ANGUS.

ROSSE. The king hath happily receiv'd Macbeth,
The news of thy fuccefs: and when he reads
Thy perfonal venture in the rebels' fight,.
His wonders and his praises do contend,

Which should be thine, or his: Silenc'd with that,
In viewing o'er the reft o' the self-fame day,
He finds thee in the ftout Norveyan ranks,
Nothing afeard of what thyself didst make.
Strange images of death.

As thick as tale,9

digging and hurling of ftones from one place to another, as though it had been a matter of great waight, and to be done with all posfible fpeede." MALONE.

8 His wonders and his praifes do contend,

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Which should be thine, or his: &c.] i. e. private admiration of your deeds, and a defire to do them publick juftice by commendation, contend in his mind for pre-eminence.—Or,—There is a conteft in his mind whether he should indulge his defire of publifhing to the world the commendations due to your heroism, or whether he should remain in filent admiration of what no words could celebrate in proportion to its defert.

Mr. M. Mason would read wonder, not wonders; for, fays he, "I believe the word wonder, in the fenfe of admiration, has no plural." In modern language it certainly has none; yet cannot help thinking that, in the present inftance, plural was opposed to plural by Shakspeare. STEEVENS.

Silenc'd with that,] i. e. wrapp'd in filent wonder at the deeds performed by Macbeth, &c. MALONE.

As thick as tale,] Meaning, that the news came as thick

Came poft with poft; and every one did bear
Thy praises in his kingdom's great defence,
And pour'd them down before him.

ANG.

We are fent,

as a tale can travel with the pot. Or we may read, perhaps, yet better:

As thick as tale,

Came poft with post;

That is, pofts arrived as faft as they could be counted.

So, in King Henry VI. P. HI. A& II. fc. i :

"Tidings, as fwiftly as the poft could run,
"Were brought," &c.

Mr. Rowe reads as thick as hail.

STEEVENS.

JOHNSON.

The old copy reads-Can post. The emendation is Mr. Rowe's. Dr. Johnfon's explanation would be lefs exceptionable, if the old copy had-As quick as tale. Thick applies but ill to tale, and feems rather to favour Mr. Rowe's emendation.

"As thick as hail," as an anonymous correspondent observes to me, is an expreffion in the old play of King John, 1591:

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"As thick as hail-ftones 'fore the spring's approach." The emendation of the word can is fupported by a paffage in K. Henry IV. P. II:

"And there are twenty weak and wearied pofts

"Come from the north." MALONE.

Dr. Johnson's explanation is perfeâly juftifiable. As thick, in ancient language, fignified as faft. To speak thick, in our author, does not therefore mean, to have a cloudy indiftin&t utterance, but to deliver words with rapidity. So, in Cymbeline: A& III. fẹ. ii :

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(Love's counfellor fhould fill the bores of hearing "To the fmothering of the fenfe) how far it is

"To this fame bleffed Milford.'

Again, in K. Henry IV. P. H. A& II. fc. iii:

"And speaking thick, which nature made his blemish,

"Became the accents of the valiant;

"For those that could speak low and tardily,
"Would turn &c.-To feem like him."

Thick therefore is not lefs applicable to tale, the old reading,

than to hail, the alteration of Mr. Rowe.

STEEVENS,

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