Page:Shakespearean Tragedy (1912).djvu/416

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400
SHAKESPEAREAN TRAGEDY
lect. x.

The effect is extraordinarily impressive. The soaring pride and power of Lady Macbeth’s first speeches return on our memory, and the change is felt with a breathless awe. Any attempt, even by Shakespeare, to draw out the moral enfolded in this awe, would but weaken it. For the moment, too, all the language of poetry—even of Macbeth’s poetry—seems to be touched with unreality, and these brief toneless sentences seem the only voice of truth.[1]

  1. The verse-speech of the Doctor, which closes this scene, lowers the tension towards that of the next scene. His introductory conversation with the Gentlewoman is written in prose (sometimes very near verse), partly, perhaps, from its familiar character, but chiefly because Lady Macbeth is to speak in prose.