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'DUN. I have begun to plant thee, and will labour To make thee full of growing.'-Noble Banquo, That haft no lefs deferv'd, nor must be known No lefs to have done fo, let me infold thee,

And hold thee to my heart.

BAN.

The harvest is your own.

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A fimilar expreffion occurs alfo in the Letters of the Pafton Family, Vol. II. p. 245. -ye thalle fynde me to yow as kynde as I maye be, my confcienfe and worshyp fany'd." STEEVENS.

A paffage in Cupid's Revenge, a comedy by Beaumont and Fletcher, adds fome fupport to Sir William Blackftone's emendation:

"I'll fpeak it freely, always my obedience

"And love preferved unto the prince."

So alfo the following words spoken by Henry Duke of Lancaster to King Richard II. at their interview in the Castle of Flint (a paffage that Shak fpeare had certainly read and perhaps remembered): "My fovereign lorde and kyng, the caufe of my coming, at this prefent, is, your honour faved], to have againe reftitution of my perfon, my landes, and heritage, through your favourable licence." Holinfhed's Chron. Vol. II.

Our author himself alfo furnishes us with a paffage that likewife may serve to confirm this emendation, See The Winter's Tale, p. 156:

"Save him from danger; do HIM love and honour.” Again, in Twelfth Night:

"What fhall you afk of me that I'll deny,
"That honour fav'd may upon asking give?"

Again, in Cymbeline:

"I fomething fear my father's wrath, but nothing
"(Always referv'd my holy duty) what

"His rage can do on me.

Our poet has ufed the verb to fafe in Antony and Cleopatra:

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beft you faf'd the bringer

"Out of the hoft." MALONE.

-full of growing.] Is, I believe, exuberant, perfect, complete in thy growth. So, in Othello:

"What a full fortune doth the thick-lips owe?"

MALONE.

DUN.

My plenteous joys,
Wanton in fulness, seek to hide themselves
In drops of forrow.+-Sons, kinfmen, thanes,
And you whofe places are the nearest, know,
We will establish our eftate upon

Our eldeft, Malcolm; whom we name hereafter,
The prince of Cumberland: which honour must
Not, unaccompanied, inveft him only,

But figns of nobleness, like ftars, shall shine
On all defervers. From hence to Invernefs,'
And bind us further to you.

MACB. The reft is labour, which is not us'd for

you:

I'll be myself the harbinger, and make joyful
The hearing of my wife with your approach;
So, humbly take my leave.

DUN.

4 My plenteous joys,

My worthy Cawdor!

Wanton in fulness, seek to hide themselves

In drops of forrow.]

lachrymas non fponte cadentes

Effudit, gemitufque expreffit pectore læto ;
Non aliter manifesta potens abfcondere mentis
Gaudia, quam lachrymis. Lucan. lib. ix.

There was no English translation of Lucan before 1614.-We meet with the fame fentiment again in The Winter's Tale: "It feem'd forrow wept to take leave of them, for their joy waded in tears." It is likewise employed in the first scene of Much ado about Nothing. MALONE.

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hence to Invernefs,] Dr. Johnfon obferves, in his Journey to the Western Isles of Scotland, that the walls of the caftle of Macbeth at Inverness are yet ftanding. STEEVENS.

The circumftance of Duncan's vifiting Macbeth is fupported by hiftory; for, from the Scottish Chronicles it appears, that it was customary for the king to make a progrefs through his dominions every year. "Inerat ei [Duncano] laudabilis confuetudo regni pertranfire regiones femel in anno.” Fordun. Scotichran. Lib. IV.

MACB. The prince of Cumberland!"-That is

a step,

On which I muft fall down, or else o'er-leap,

"

[Afide.

Singulis annis ad inopum querelas audiendas perluftrabat provincias." Buchan. Lib. VII. MALONE.

6 The prince of Cumberland!] So, Holinfhed, Hift. of Scot land, p. 171: "Duncan having two fonnes, &c. he made the elder of them, called Malcolme, prince of Cumberland, as it were thereby to appoint him fucceffor in his kingdome immediatlie after his de ceafe. Mackbeth forely troubled herewith, for that he saw by this means his hope fore hindered, (where, by the old laws of the realme the ordinance was, that if he that fhould fucceed were not of able age to take the charge upon himself, he that was next of bloud unto him should be admitted,) he began to take counsel how he might ufurpe the kingdome by force, having a juft quarrel fo to doe (as he tooke the matter), for that Duncane did what in him lay to defraud him of all manner of title and claime, which he might, in time to come, pretend unto the crowne."

The crown of Scotland was originally not hereditary. When a fucceffor was declared in the life-time of a king (as was often the cafe), the title of Prince of Cumberland was immediately bestowed on him as the mark of his defignation. Cumberland was at that time held by Scotland of the crown of England, as a fief.

STEEVENS.

The former part of Mr. Steevens's remark is fupported by Bellenden's Tranflation of Hector Boethius: " In the mene tyme Kyng Duncane maid his fon Malcolme Prince of Cumbir, to fignify y he fuld regne eftir hym, quhilk wes gret difplefeir to Makbeth; for it maid plane derogatioun to the thrid weird promittit afore to hym be this weird fifteris. Nochtheles he thoct gif Duncane were flane, he had maift rycht to the croun, because he wes nereft of blud yairto, be tenour of ye auld lavis maid eftir the deith of King Fergus, quhen young children wer unabel to govern the croun, the nerreft of yair blude fal regne." So alfo Buchanan, Rerum Scoticarum Hift. lib. vii.

"Duncanus e filia Sibardi reguli Northumbrorum, duos filios genuerat. Ex iis Milcolumbum, vixdum puberem, Cumbriæ præfecit. Id factum ejus Macbethus moleftius, quam credi poterat, tulit, eam videlicet moram fibi ratus injectam, ut, priores jam magiftratus (juxta vifum nocturnum) adeptus, aut omnino a regno excluderetur, aut eo tardius potiretur, cum præfectura Cumbria velut aditus ad fupremum magiftratum SEMPER et habitus." It has been

For in my way it lies. Stars, hide your fires!
Let not light fee my black and deep defires:
The eye wink at the hand! yet let that be,
Which the eye fears, when it is done, to fee.

[Exit. DUN. True, worthy Banquo; he is full fo valiant; 7

afferted by an anonymous writer [Mr. Ritfon] that "the crown of Scotland was always hereditary, and that it should feem from the play that Malcolm was the firft who had the title of Prince of Cumberland." An extract or two from Hector Boethius will be sufficient relative to thefe points. In the tenth chapter of the eleventh book of his Hiftory we are informed, that fome of the friends of Kenneth III. the eightieth king of Scotland, came among the nobles, defiring them to choose Malcolm, the fon of Kenneth, to be Lord of Cumbir," yt he mycht be yt way the better cum to ye crown after his faderis deid." Two of the nobles faid, it was in the power of Kenneth to make whom he pleafed Lord of Cumberland; and Malcolm was accordingly appointed. "Sic thingis done, king Kenneth, be advife of his nobles, abrogat ye auld lawis concerning the creation of yair king, and made new lawis in manner as followes: 1. The king beand deceffit, his eldest fon or his eldest nepot, (notwithstanding quhat fumevir age he be of, and youcht he was born efter his faderis death, fal fuccede ye croun," &c. Notwithstanding this precaution, Malcolm, the eldeft fon of Kenneth, did not fucceed to the throne after the death of his father; for after Kenneth reigned Conftantine, the son of king Culyne. To him fucceeded Gryme, who was not the fon of Conftantine, but the grandfon of king Duffe. Gryme, fays Boethius, came to Scone, quhare he was crownit by the tenour of the auld lawis." After the death of Gryme, Malcolm, the fon of king Kenneth, whom Boethius frequently calls Prince of Cumberland, became king of Scotland; and to him fucceeded Duncan, the fon of his eldest daughter.

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Thefe breaches, however, in the fucceffion appear to have been occafioned by violence in turbulent times; and though the eldest fon could not fucceed to the throne, if he happened to be a minor at the death of his father, yet, as by the ancient laws the next of blood was to reign, the Scottish monarchy may be faid to have been hereditary, fubject however to peculiar regulations. MALONE. 1 True, worthy Banquo; he is full fo valiant;] i. e. he is to the VOL. VII.

B b

And in his commendations I am fed ;

It is a banquet to me.

Whofe care is gone before to bid us welcome:

It is a peerless kinsman.

Let us after him,

[Flourish. Exeunt.

SCENE V.

Inverness. A Room in Macbeth's Castle.

Enter Lady MACBETH, reading a letter.

LADY M.-They met me in the day of fuccefs; and I have learned by the perfecteft report, they have more in them than mortal knowledge. When I burn'd in defire to question them further, they made themfelvesair, into which they vanifb'd. Whiles I flood rapt in the wonder of it, came millives from the king," who allbail'd me, Thane of Cawdor; by which title, before, thefe weird fifters faluted me, and referr'd me to the coming on of time, with, Hail, king that fhalt be! This have I thought good to deliver thee, my dearest partner of greatnefs; that thou might'ft not lofe the dues of rejoicing, by being ignorant of what greatness is promifed thee. Lay it to thy heart, and farewell.

full as valiant as you have defcribed him. We must imagine, that while Macbeth was uttering the fix preceding lines, Duncan and Banquo had been conferring apart. Macbeth's conduct appears to have been their fubject; and to fome encomium fuppofed to have been bestowed on him by Banquo, the reply of Duncan refers.

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STEEVENS.

by the perfecteft report,] By the beft intelligence.

JOHNSON.

miffives from the king,] i. c. meffengers. So, in Antony and Cleopatra:

Did gibe my missive out of audience." STEEVENS,

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