Page:Shakespearean Tragedy (1912).djvu/390

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374
SHAKESPEAREAN TRAGEDY
lect. x.

either that they may gain such power as to ruin the scheme, or that, while they mean present weakness, they mean also perception of the future. At one point in the murder scene the force of his imagination impresses her, and for a moment she is startled; a light threatens to break on her:

These deeds must not be thought
After these ways: so, it will make us mad,

she says, with a sudden and great seriousness. And when he goes panting on, ‘Methought I heard a voice cry, “Sleep no more,”’ . . . she breaks in, ‘What do you mean?’ half-doubting whether this was not a real voice that he heard. Then, almost directly, she recovers herself, convinced of the vanity of his fancy. Nor does she understand herself any better than him. She never suspects that these deeds must be thought after these ways; that her facile realism,

A little water clears us of this deed,

will one day be answered by herself, ‘Will these hands ne’er be clean?’ or that the fatal commonplace, ‘What’s done is done,’ will make way for her last despairing sentence, ‘What’s done cannot be undone.’

Hence the development of her character—perhaps it would be more strictly accurate to say, the change in her state of mind—is both inevitable, and the opposite of the development we traced in Macbeth. When the murder has been done, the discovery of its hideousness, first reflected in the faces of her guests, comes to Lady Macbeth with the shock of a sudden disclosure, and at once her nature begins to sink. The first intimation of the change is given when, in the scene of the discovery, she faints.[1] When next we see her, Queen of Scotland, the glory of her dream has faded. She enters, dis-

  1. See Note DD.