Macbeth (31 page)

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Authors: William Shakespeare

BOOK: Macbeth
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prate
speak  

65
prate … whereabout
betray my location  

present
immediate/pressing  

66
take … it
(in breaking the silence) take on (or “remove”) the acute horror of this moment that is so suitable for it  

67
threat
threaten (to act)  

70
knell
toll of a bell rung at funerals or after a death  

1
them
i.e. Duncan’s servants  

2
quenched
extinguished (fire)  

3
owl
considered a bird of ill omen whose cry heralded death  

bellman
one who rang a bell to announce a death/night watchman who rang a bell every hour  

4
stern’st goodnight
harshest and final good night (death)  

5
surfeited
sated, drunk  

grooms
male servants  

6
mock
make a mockery of/defy/imitate  

possets
hot spiced drinks often consumed before bed  

7
That
so that  

contend about
compete for, fight over  

12
Confounds
ruins, defeats  

13
he
i.e. Duncan  

27
one … one
Malcolm and Donalbain (although possibly the grooms)  

29
addressed them
prepared themselves  

33
As
as if  

hangman’s hands
perhaps a general reference to any executioner, though a hangman might have had bloody hands as he sometimes disemboweled the bodies of hanged men  

37
wherefore
why  

40
thought … ways
dwelt on in this manner  

41
so
to do so  

44
ravelled
unraveled, frayed  

sleeve
part of the arm of a piece of clothing/silk filament produced by untwisting a thicker thread  

45
bath
soothing bath/healing liquid  

46
Balm
healing ointment  

second course
main, most nourishing dish in a
feast
  

53
unbend
slacken, weaken  

55
filthy witness
i.e. Duncan’s blood  

57
lie
remain (plays on sense of “deceive”)  

65
painted
pictured/smeared (with blood)  

do bleed
is still bleeding/begins to bleed afresh (murdered corpses were thought to bleed in the presence of the murderer)  

66
gild
paint, as with gold leaf (puns on
guilt
)  

68
Whence
from where  

69
appals me
makes me pale/terrifies me  

71
Neptune
Roman god of the sea  

73
multitudinous
numerous/containing many waves  

incarnadine
make red, stain with blood  

74
green one red
green sea entirely red/the green one (i.e. the sea) red  

75
shame
would be ashamed  

76
white
i.e. cowardly  

77
south entry
southern entrance to the castle  

78
clears
cleans/frees from accusation  

79
constancy … unattended
your firmness has abandoned you  

81
nightgown
dressing gown  

occasion
events/chance  

82
watchers
those who remain awake  

83
poorly
miserably/feebly, inadequately  

84
To … myself
i.e. being mentally
lost
is preferable to acknowledging what I have done/if consciousness of what I have done is to be endured, I must abandon my former self  

2
old
plenty of  

3
Beelzebub
common name of a devil  

4
Here’s
the Porter begins to imagine those arriving in hell  

th’expectation of plenty
presumably the farmer anticipated making a profit by hoarding his grain, only to be confounded by an abundant harvest and low prices; alternatively, he staked everything on a plentiful harvest that did not materialize  

5
come in time
you have come at a good time  

napkins
handkerchiefs (to wipe the
sweat
resulting from the heat of hell)  

7
other devil
another devil whose name escapes the Porter (though also suggestive of Macbeth)  

Faith
by my faith (a common oath)  

8
equivocator
one who uses words ambiguously, so that more than one meaning may apply  

scales
here specifically the scales of justice  

9
for God’s sake
a common oath, but also a reference to Catholics who used equivocation in court as a way of escaping prosecution  

13
stealing … hose
scrimping on the material used to make a pair of breeches/being too lecherous and dying of syphilis (tailors were popularly viewed as lustful and this one has let his penis steal out too often from his breeches; “
tail”
was slang for “penis”)  

14
roast your goose
heat up your tailor’s iron/have sex with your prostitute/contract venereal disease  

17
primrose … bonfire
seemingly attractive but sinful path to eternal damnation  

19
remember
give a tip to  

22
carousing
reveling/drinking toasts  

second cock
second crowing of the cockerel (3 a.m. or later)  

25
Marry
by the Virgin Mary  

nose-painting
i.e. reddening of the nose  

29
mars
spoils  

sets … off
creates a sexual urge but renders him impotent  

30
stand … to
get an erection and lose it  

31
equivocates … sleep
gives him erotic pleasure in a dream only  

giving … lie
deceiving him (as he cannot actually perform sexually)/laying him flat (as in wrestling)/leaving him without an erection/calling him a liar/making him urinate  

34
i’the … me
literally, in my throat/(deceiving) deliberately, outrageously  

35
requited
repaid (with violence)  

36
took … legs
made me incapable of walking, pulled my legs out from under me (as a wrestler would)  

made a shift
contrived  

37
cast him
throw him down/vomit  

44
timely
early/promptly  

45
slipped the hour
missed the designated time  

48
yet ’tis one
nevertheless it still is a
trouble
  

49
The … pain
tasks we take pleasure in cure any hardship they entail  

52
limited
appointed  

54
appoint
intend/determine  

55
unruly
disordered, turbulent  

57
Lamentings
cries of grief  

58
prophesying
foretelling/preaching/uttering solemnly  

accents terrible
terrifying utterances  

59
dire combustion
dreadful confusion/ dangerous tumult  

events
outcomes  

60
New hatched to
newly born as offspring to/newly born into  

obscure
of darkness/hidden  

obscure bird
i.e. the owl, bird of darkness  

61
livelong
long-lasting  

64
My … to it
my youthful memory cannot remember one like it/I cannot remember one like it even during my youth  

67
conceive
imagine/comprehend, take in  

69
Confusion
disorder/destruction/disaster  

70
sacrilegious
unholy, profane (literally “sacrilege” is “stealing what is God’s”)  

ope
open  

71
Lord’s anointed temple
God’s consecrated house of worship/Duncan’s head or body (
anointed
with holy oil at his coronation)  

76
Gorgon
in Greek mythology, a female monster; anyone who looked at her was turned to stone  

81
downy
soft, comfortable  

counterfeit
imitator/likeness  

83
great doom’s image
image of Judgment Day, the end of the world when the dead were supposed to
rise
from their
graves
  

84
sprites
spirits, ghosts  

85
countenance
face/be in keeping with  

87
trumpet
i.e. noise, clamor (a trumpet was also supposed to sound at Judgment Day)  

parley
conversation/negotiation between enemy forces (announced with a trumpet call)  

91
repetition
recital, report  

99
chance
moment/event/misfortune  

101
mortality
life  

102
toys
trifles, insignificant things  

renown and grace
honor  

103
drawn
drained (from a barrel)  

lees
dregs  

104
left
left in  

vault
wine cellar/world beneath the arched sky  

brag
boast, be proud  

108
stopped
ended/stopped-up  

112
badged
marked as if with a badge worn by liveried servants  

114
stared
looked stunned, horror-struck/gazed fixedly  

distracted
agitated/ confused  

119
amazed
stunned/confused/dismayed  

temp’rate
calm, composed, restrained  

121
Th’expedition
the haste  

violent
passionate/impetuous (plays on the sense of “destructive, bloody”)  

122
pauser
provoker of hesitation and self-restraint (the faculty of
reason
)  

124
breach
flaw/gap in fortifications made by an onslaught of heavy blows  

125
wasteful
destructive  

126
Steeped
dyed/soaked  

127
Unmannerly
improperly  

breeched
covered, as if wearing breeches (puns on
breach
)  

129
make’s
make his  

132
Why … ours?
Why do we remain silent when this subject has most to do with us?  

132
Why … ours?
Why do we remain silent when this subject has most to do with us?  

135
auger hole
small hole drilled with a carpenter’s tool (
auger
), i.e. undetectable hiding place  

seize
ambush  

rush … us
Donalbain fears that his father’s murderer may now seek to harm him and his brother  

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