The standard edition of the pictorial Shakspere . We shall not spend a large expense we reckon with your several loves,And make us even with you. My thanes andkinsmen, » The fine echo of Macduffs salutation is written bySteevens, King of Scotland, hail—for the sake of may say, with a slight alteration of Hotspurs words, I had rather be a kitten and cry—^mewThan one of these same metre-mmgers. 57 Act v.] MACBETH. [Scene VII. Henceforth be earls, the first that ever ScotlandIn such an honour namd. Whats more to do,Which would be planted newly with the time,—As calli


The standard edition of the pictorial Shakspere . We shall not spend a large expense we reckon with your several loves,And make us even with you. My thanes andkinsmen, » The fine echo of Macduffs salutation is written bySteevens, King of Scotland, hail—for the sake of may say, with a slight alteration of Hotspurs words, I had rather be a kitten and cry—^mewThan one of these same metre-mmgers. 57 Act v.] MACBETH. [Scene VII. Henceforth be earls, the first that ever ScotlandIn such an honour namd. Whats more to do,Which would be planted newly with the time,—As calling home our exild friends abroadThat fled the snares of watchful tyranny ;Producing forth the cruel ministersOf this dead butcher, and his fiend-like queen. Who, as t is thought, by self and violent handsTook off her life ;—this, and what needful elseThat calls upon us, by the grace of Grace,We will perform in measure, time, and place :So thanks to all at once, and to each we invite to see us crownd at Scone. ^Flourish. [The Dunsinane Range.] 58 ILLUSTRATIONS OF ACT V. HISTORICAL ILLUSTRATION. HoLiNSHED thus narrates the catastrophe:— He had such confidence in his prophecies, thathe believed he should never be vanquished till Ber-nane wood were brought to Dunsinane; nor yet tobe slain with any man that should be or was bornof any Malcolm, following hastily after Macbeth, camethe night before the battle unto Bernane wood, and,when liis army had rested awhile there to refreshthem, he commanded every man to get a bough ofsome tree or other of that wood in his hand, as bigas lie might bear, and to marcli forth therewith insuch wise that on the next morrow they might comeclosely and without sight in this manner withinview of his enemies. On the morrow, when Mac-beth beheld them coming in this sort, he first mar-velled what the matter meant, but in the end re-membered liimself that the prophecy which lie hadlieard long before that timf, of the com


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Keywords: ., bookauthorshakespearewilliam15641616, bookcentury1800, bookdecad