Stop ye mysterious things-I charge you stay,.) I'm Thane of Glamis-How of Cawdor too? And then to be, as you assert, a king, 4 From whence have you deriv'd this information? Why stop our way with such strange salutation? Explain (The Witches run off. Banquo. The earth hath bubbles, now I con, As well as hath the water-but they're gone. Macbeth. Off like a shot!(10) and what seem'd woman kind, Tripp'd it along like chaff before the wind. Wou'd they had staid Banquo. Methinks 'tis all a dream And what hath been, a fallacy doth seem. Enter Rosse and Angus. Rosse. Macbeth, the king hath heard of all thy feats, Angus. So high your valor in his favor ranks, Rosse. He bade me too to greet you by the name Banquo. How! The devil then speaks truth we must allow. Macbeth. The Thane of Cawdor lives as I suppose— Angus, Who was the Thane yet lives—but lives to scorn, Macbeth. Glamis and Thane of Cawdor—but I find, (Rosse & An. ex. Well, my brave friend, since what hath taken place, Don't you now hope to have a royal race? DUETT. Tune-Out of my sight or I'll box your ears. Two truths are told and I must believe. Banquo. The Devil tells truth sometimes to deceive. |