Authors: William Shakespeare
Preparation of “
Macbeth
in Performance” was assisted by a generous grant from the CAPITAL Centre (Creativity and Performance in Teaching and Learning) of the University of Warwick for research in the RSC archive at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. The Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) funded a term’s research leave that enabled Jonathan Bate to work on “The Director’s Cut.”
Picture research by Michelle Morton. Grateful acknowledgment is made to the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust for assistance with reproduction fees and picture research (special thanks to Helen Hargest).
Images of RSC productions are supplied by the Shakespeare Centre Library and Archive, Stratford-upon-Avon. This library, maintained by the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, holds the most important collection of Shakespeare material in the UK, including the Royal Shakespeare Company’s official archives. It is open to the public free of charge.
For more information see www.shakespeare.org.uk.
“Macbeth and Banquo” in private collection © Bardbiz Limited
Ellen Terry (1888). Reproduced by permission of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Directed by Glen Byam Shaw (1955). Angus McBean © Royal Shakespeare Company
Directed by Peter Hall (1967). Tom Holte © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Directed by Adrian Noble (1986). Joe Cocks Studio Collection © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Directed by Trevor Nunn (1976). Joe Cocks Studio Collection © Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Directed by Rupert Goold (2007). © Donald Cooper/Photostage
Directed by Gregory Doran (1999). Jonathan Dockar Drysdale © Royal Shakespeare Company
Reconstructed Elizabethan playhouse © Charcoalblue
T
HE
M
ODERN
L
IBRARY
E
DITORIAL
B
OARD
Maya Angelou
•
A. S. Byatt
•
Caleb Carr
•
Christopher Cerf
•
Harold Evans
•
Charles Frazier
•
Vartan Gregorian
•
Jessica Hagedorn
•
Richard Howard
•
Charles Johnson
•
Jon Krakauer
•
Edmund Morris
•
Azar Nafisi
•
Joyce Carol Oates
•
Elaine Pagels
•
John Richardson
•
Salman Rushdie
•
Oliver Sacks
•
Carolyn See
•
Gore Vidal
Copyright © 2007, 2009 by The Royal Shakespeare Company
All rights reserved.
Published in the United States by Modern Library, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York.
“Royal Shakespeare Company,” “RSC,” and the RSC logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of The Royal Shakespeare Company.
The version of
Macbeth
and the corresponding footnotes that appear in this volume were originally published in
William Shakespeare Complete Works
, edited by Jonathan Bate and Eric Rasmussen, published in 2007 by Modern Library, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc.
eISBN: 978-1-58836-833-1
v3.0
3
hurly-burly
turmoil, uproar, strife
5
ere
before
9
Grey Malkin
a cat, the First Witch’s familiar (a spirit in animal form that carried out evil deeds for a witch)
10
Paddock
the Second Witch’s familiar, a toad
11
Anon
soon, in a moment
Alarum
a trumpet call to arms
2
plight
condition, appearance
3
newest state
latest state of affairs
5
hardy
bold/vigorous
6
captivity
capture by the enemy
7
broil
battle, tumult
10
spent
exhausted
11
choke their art
destroy their skill (i.e. weigh one another down and drown)
12
to that
to that end, for that reason
13
multiplying … nature
increasing numbers of evils within nature/growing numbers of unnatural rebel soldiers
14
Western Isles
the Hebrides (islands west of Scotland) and possibly Ireland
15
Of kerns
with lightly armed foot soldiers
gallowglasses
soldiers armed with axes
supplied
reinforced
16
quarrel
dispute/hostile cause (“her damnèd quarry” would be an alternative reading)
17
Showed
appeared/ sexually displayed herself
19
brandished
shining/flourished
21
minion
favorite one, darling
carved … passage
hacked his way through
22
slave
villain (i.e. the rebel Macdonald)
23
Which
who (i.e. Macbeth)
24
unseamed him
ripped him in two (clothing metaphor)
nave to th’chops
navel to the jaws
27
As … thunders
just as destructive storms and dreadful thunder originate (like the Norwegian invaders) in the east, where the warming sun rises/just as when the sun begins to return at the spring equinox, it is accompanied by storms
’gins
begins
reflection
shining/return
29
spring
source (of water)/springtime
comfort
encouraging news
30
swells
wells up/becomes swollen
Mark
note, pay attention
32
skipping
lightly armed/nervously bounding/absconding
trust their heels
run away
33
Norwegian lord
i.e. Sweno (original pronunciation: “Norweyan”)
surveying vantage
perceiving an advantage
34
furbished
gleaming/revived
37
Yes … lion
i.e. only as much as a weak creature would dismay a powerful predator
38
sooth
truth
report
tell (plays on the sense of “noise of a cannon firing”)
39
cracks
charges of gunpowder
41
Except
unless
reeking
bloody/steaming (as the hot blood meets the air)
42
memorize
make memorable
Golgotha
“place of skulls” where Christ was crucified
45
become
befit/honor
46
smack
savor (plays on the sense of “the noise lips make in tasting” and so continues the idea of
gashes
as mouths)
48
Thane
title of a member of the Scottish nobility (broadly equivalent to an English earl)
49
looks through
appears in
50
seems to
seems to be about to
53
Fife
region on the east coast of Scotland
54
flout
defy/mock
56
Norway himself
i.e. Sweno, King of Norway
terrible numbers
terrifying quantities of soldiers
58
dismal
devastating/ominous
59
Bellona’s bridegroom
i.e. Macbeth
Bellona
Roman goddess of war
lapped in proof
wrapped in armor of tried and tested strength
60
Confronted … self-comparisons
i.e. matched him in every respect
61
Point
sword’s point
arm
weapon
62
lavish
unrestrained, wild
65
Norways
Norwegians
66
Craves composition
requests a peace treaty
67
deign
condescend to permit
68
disbursèd
paid out
Saint Colme’s inch
Inchcolm, an island in the Firth of Forth (estuary on the east coast of Scotland)
69
dollars
English name for the German thaler, as well as for silver coins from various northern countries
71
bosom interest
closest, most intimate concerns
present
immediate
6
quoth
said
7
Aroint thee
be off with you
rump-fed
fed on rump (a generous cut of meat), hence greedy/with a well-fed vagina, hence lecherous
runnion
abusive term for a woman (possibly plays on the abusive slang sense of “penis”)
8
Aleppo
trading city in northern Syria
master
captain
Tiger
the ship’s name
10
like
in the guise of
11
do
act/have sex (it was thought that witches often seduced their male victims)
15
other
other winds
16
ports they blow
a wind blowing from land would make a port inaccessible to a ship at sea
17
quarters
directions/compass points
18
I’th’shipman’s card
in the sailor’s chart/card showing the compass points
19
drain
exhaust/drain sexually
21
penthouse lid
eyelid (that projects like a top-heavy upper floor of a building)
22
forbid
cursed
23
sennights
weeks (seven nights)
24
peak and pine
waste away and starve (perhaps with connotations of phallic detumescence)
25
bark
ship
26
tempest-tossed
tossed on the sea by storms
29
pilot
steersman of a ship
33
weyard
wayward; with the power to control or foresee destiny; the fact that there are three witches invites a comparison with the classical Fates (always spelled “weyard” or “weyward” in Folio; never “weird,” the spelling in the play’s source, Holinshed’s “Chronicles of Scotland”)
34
Posters
swift travelers
35
Thus… nine
the witches perform a ritualized dance or series of movements
38
Peace
be still/be silent
charm
magic spell
wound up
prepared, ready
39
foul and fair
darkly stormy yet bright in terms of military success (the phrase also resonates with the sense of “morally wicked and virtuous”)
40
is’t called
is it said to be
Forres
town in the northeast of Scotland, east of Inverness
43
on’t
on it (the earth)
aught
anything
45
choppy
chapped
46
should be
would appear to be
53
start
flinch/react nervously/ recoil