Page:Macbethandkingr00kembgoog.djvu/173

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[158]

beth, is in itself a decisive proof, that he never meant his nature should be liable to so base a reproach. His deadliest enemies, they who have suffered most from his oppression and cruelty, in the deepest expressions of their detestation of his person and triumph over his fallen condition, are never allowed by the poet to utter a syllable in derogation from his known character of intrepidity. Malcolm, robbed of the crown, and driven into exile, by his bloody usurpation, calls him

The devilish Macbeth;[1]

and charges him with being

  1. Macbeth, Act iv. Sc. 3.