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- MACBETH
-
- Macbeth is presented as a mature man of definitely
- established character, successful in certain fields of
- activity and enjoying an enviable reputation. We must not
- conclude, there, that all his volitions and actions are
- predictable; Macbeth's character, like any other man's at a
- given moment, is what is being made out of potentialities
- plus environment, and no one, not even Macbeth himself, can
- know all his inordinate self-love whose actions are
- discovered to be-and no doubt have been for a long time-
- determined mainly by an inordinate desire for some temporal
- or mutable good.
- Macbeth is actuated in his conduct mainly by an
- inordinate desire for worldly honors; his delight lies
- primarily in buying golden opinions from all sorts of people.
- But we must not, therefore, deny him an entirely human
- complexity of motives. For example, his fighting in Duncan's
- service is magnificent and courageous, and his evident joy in
- it is traceable in art to the natural pleasure which
- accompanies the explosive expenditure of prodigious physical
- energy and the euphoria which follows. He also rejoices no
- doubt in the success which crowns his efforts in battle - and
- so on. He may even conceived of the proper motive which
- should energize back of his great deed:
-
- The service and the loyalty I owe,
- In doing it, pays itself.
-
- But while he destroys the king's enemies, such motives work
- but dimly at best and are obscured in his consciousness by
- more vigorous urges. In the main, as we have said, his nature
- violently demands rewards: he fights valiantly in order that
- he may be reported in such terms a "valour's minion" and
- "Bellona's bridegroom"' he values success because it brings
- spectacular fame and new titles and royal favor heaped upon
- him in public. Now so long as these mutable goods are at all
- commensurate with his inordinate desires - and such is the
- case, up until he covets the kingship - Macbeth remains an
- honorable gentleman. He is not a criminal; he has no criminal
- tendencies. But once permit his self-love to demand a
- satisfaction which cannot be honorably attained, and he is
- likely to grasp any dishonorable means to that end which may
- be safely employed. In other words, Macbeth has much of
- natural good in him unimpaired; environment has conspired
- with his nature to make him upright in all his dealings with
- those about him. But moral goodness in him is undeveloped and
- indeed still rudimentary, for his voluntary acts are scarcely
- brought into harmony with ultimate end.
- As he returns from victorious battle, puffed up with
- self-love which demands ever-increasing recognition of his
- greatness, the demonic forces of evil-symbolized by the Weird
- Sisters-suggest to his inordinate imagination the splendid
- prospect of attaining now the greatest mutable good he has
- ever desired. These demons in the guise of witches cannot
- read his inmost thoughts, but from observation of facial
- expression and other bodily manifestations they surmise with
- comparative accuracy what passions drive him and what dark
- desires await their fostering. Realizing that he wishes the
- kingdom, they prophesy that he shall be king. They cannot
- thus compel his will to evil; but they do arouse his passions
- and stir up a vehement and inordinate apprehension of the
- imagination, which so perverts the judgment of reason that it
- leads his will toward choosing means to the desired temporal
- good. Indeed his imagination and passions are so vivid under
- this evil impulse from without that "nothing is but what is
- not"; and his reason is so impeded that he judges, "These
- solicitings cannot be evil, cannot be good." Still, he is
- provided with so much natural good that he is able to control
- the apprehensions of his inordinate imagination and decides
- to take no step involving crime. His autonomous decision not
- to commit murder, however, is not in any sense based upon
- moral grounds. No doubt he normally shrinks from the
- unnaturalness of regicide; but he so far ignores ultimate
- ends that, if he could perform the deed and escape its
- consequences here upon this bank and shoal of time, he'ld
- jump the life to come. Without denying him still a complexity
- of motives - as kinsman and subject he may possibly
- experience some slight shade of unmixed loyalty to the King
- under his roof-we may even say that the consequences which he
- fears are not at all inward and spiritual, It is to be
- doubted whether he has ever so far considered the possible
- effects of crime and evil upon the human soul-his later
- discovery of horrible ravages produced by evil in his own
- spirit constitutes part of the tragedy. Hi is mainly
- concerned, as we might expect, with consequences involving
- the loss of mutable goods which he already possesses and
- values highly.
- After the murder of Duncan, the natural good in him
- compels the acknowledgment that, in committing the unnatural
- act, he has filed his mind and has given his eternal jewel,
- the soul, into the possession of those demonic forces which
- are the enemy of mankind. He recognizes that the acts of
- conscience which torture him are really expressions of that
- outraged natural law, which inevitably reduced him as
- individual to the essentially human. This is the inescapable
- bond that keeps him pale, and this is the law of his own
- natural from whose exactions of devastating penalties he
- seeks release:
-
- Come, seeling night...
- And with thy bloody and invisible hand
- Cancel and tear to pieces that great bond
- Which keeps me pale.
-
- He conceives that quick escape from the accusations of
- conscience may possibly be effected by utter extirpation of
- the precepts of natural law deposited in his nature. And he
- imagines that the execution of more bloody deeds will serve
- his purpose. Accordingly, then, in the interest of personal
- safety and in order to destroy the essential humanity in
- himself, he instigates the murder of Banquo.
- But he gains no satisfying peace because hes conscience
- still obliges him to recognize the negative quality of evil
- and the barren results of wicked action. The individual who
- once prized mutable goods in the form of respect and
- admiration from those about him, now discovers that even such
- evanescent satisfactions are denied him:
-
- And that which should accompany old age,
- As honor, love, obedience, troops of friends,
- I must not look to have; but, in their stead,
- Curses, not loud but deep, mouth-honour, breath,
- Which the poor heart would fain deny, and dare not.
-
- But the man is conscious of a profound abstraction of
- something far more precious that temporal goods. His being
- has shrunk to such little measure that he has lost his former
- sensitiveness to good and evil; he has supped so full with
- horrors and the disposition of evil is so fixed in him that
- nothing can start him. His conscience is numbed so that he
- escapes the domination of fears, and such a consummation may
- indeed be called a sort of peace. But it is not entirely what
- expected or desires. Back of his tragic volitions is the
- ineradicable urge toward that supreme contentment which
- accompanies and rewards fully actuated being; the peace which
- he attains is psychologically a callousness to pain and
- spiritually a partial insensibility to the evidences of
- diminished being. His peace is the doubtful calm of utter
- negativity, where nothing matters.
- This spectacle of spiritual deterioration carried to the
- point of imminent dissolution arouses in us, however, a
- curious feeling of exaltation. For even after the external
- and internal forces of evil have done their worst, Macbeth
- remains essentially human and his conscience continues to
- witness the diminution of his being. That is to say, there is
- still left necessarily some natural good in him; sin cannot
- completely deprive him of his rational nature, which is the
- root of his inescapable inclination to virtue. We do not need
- Hecate to tell us that he is but a wayward son, spiteful and
- wrathful, who, as other do, loves for his own ends. This is
- apparent throughout the drama; he never sins because, like
- the Weird Sisters, he loves evil for its own sake; and
- whatever he does is inevitably in pursuance of some apparent
- good, even though that apparent good is only temporal of
- nothing more that escape from a present evil. At the end, in
- spite of shattered nerves and extreme distraction of mind,
- the individual passes out still adhering admirably to his
- code of personal courage, and the man's conscience still
- clearly admonishes that he has done evil.
- Moreover, he never quite loses completely the liberty of
- free choice, which is the supreme bonum naturae of mankind.
- But since a wholly free act is one in accordance with reason,
- in proportion as his reason is more and more blinded by
- inordinate apprehension of the imagination and passions of
- the sensitive appetite, his volitions become less and less
- free. And this accounts for our feeling, toward the end of
- the drama, that his actions are almost entirely determined
- and that some fatality is compelling him to his doom. This
- compulsion is in no sense from without-though theologians may
- at will interpret it so-as if some god, like Zeus in Greek
- tragedy, were dealing out punishment for the breaking of
- divine law. It is generated rather from within, and it is not
- merely a psychological phenomenon. Precepts of the natural
- law-imprints of the eternal law- deposited in his nature have
- been violated, irrational acts have established habits
- tending to further irrationality, and one of the penalties
- exacted is dire impairment of the liberty of free choice.
- Thus the Fate which broods over Macbeth may be identified
- with that disposition inherent in created things, in this
- case the fundamental motive principle of human action, by
- which providence knits all things in their proper order.
- Macbeth cannot escape entirely from his proper order; he must
- inevitably remain essentially human.
- The substance of Macbeth's personality is that out of
- which tragic heroes are fashioned; it is endowed by the
- dramatist with an astonishing abundance and variety of
- potentialities. And it is upon the development of these
- potentialities that the artist lavishes the full energies of
- his creative powers. Under the influence of swiftly altering
- environment which continually furnishes or elicts new
- experiences and under the impact of passions constantly
- shifting and mounting in intensity, the dramatic individual
- grows, expands, developes to the point where, at the end of
- the drama, he looms upon the mind as a titanic personality
- infinitely richer that at the beginning. This dramatic
- personality in its manifold stages of actuation in as
- artistic creation. In essence Macbeth, like all other men, is
- inevitably bound to his humanity; the reason of order, as we
- have seen, determines his inescapable relationship to the
- natural and eternal law, compels inclination toward his
- proper act and end but provides him with a will capable of
- free choice, and obliges his discernment of good and evil.
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