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RV 378 (Rh) side; and in the criticism of the last century there is even a tendency to sentimentalise the character. But it can hardly be doubted that Shakespeare meant the predominant impression to be one of awe, grandeur, and horror, and that he never meant this impression to be lost, however it might be modified, as Lady Macbeth’s activity diminishes and her misery increases. I cannot believe that, when she said of Banquo and Fleance,

she meant only that they would some day die; or that she felt any surprise when Macbeth replied,

though I am sure no light came into her eyes when he added those dreadful words, ‘Then be thou jocund.’ She was listless. She herself would not have moved a finger against Banquo. But she thought his death, and his son’s death, might ease her husband’s mind, and she suggested the murders indifferently and without remorse. The sleepwalking scene, again, inspires pity, but its main effect is one of awe. There is great horror in the references to blood, but it cannot be said that there is more than horror; and Campbell was surely right when, in alluding to Mrs. Jameson’s analysis, he insisted that in Lady Macbeth’s misery there is no trace of contrition. Doubtless she would have given the world to undo what she had done; and the thought of it killed her; but, regarding her