“Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,
Creeps in this petty pace from day to day,
To the last syllable of recorded time;
And all our yesterdays have lighted fools
The way to dusty death. Out, out, brief candle!
Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player,
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more. It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.”
This is the beginning of a famous soliloquy of Macbeth uttered at the fag end of his life (Act V, Scene V) when he realizes the folly and futility of his action – ambition leads him to destruction. His illusion is vanished. He has gained enlightenment through suffering and anguish of spirit.
These memorable lines are spoken by Macbeth on hearing
the news of Lady Macbeth’s death. He says rather relentlessly he should have
died hereafter. He now feels more intense and profoud. Not that he is dead to
feel; but he now philosophises in the wider perspective of life and death. He
thinks on the vanity of human life.
“Tomorrow, and tomorrow, and tomorrow,” Meaning
One tomorrow creeps after another tomorrow from day to day in the dullest and monotonous way till the last word is reached in the book of life. We are deluded by the hopes of future – for better tomorrow.
The lines give the picture of tormented Macbeth
suffering the torture of his own conscience.
“To the last syllable of recorded time;”
Time is pictured as a book of which the last syllable will be reached when the tale of human existence is over. Time creeps in its petty and slow pace till the last syllable is reached and the book of human life is brought to a finish. A strange mixture of metaphor; from being something regularly moves forward, becomes a lengthy scroll.
“Recorded times”, other interpretations are :
- Fixed in the decree of heaven for the period of (a man’s) life. (Johnson)
- That has been and shall be recorded. (Mason)
- Till the last judgement. (Elison)
Each tomorrow passes into a yesterday. Each tomorrow
comes and goes befooling man, exposing the folly of man’s trust and leading him
to the way to the dust. The pity of
human life is that, like a fool, man goes on living from day to day hardly caring
to know that each day carries him nearer to death.
“The way to dusty death.”
“Dusty death” is a reference to the biblical passages
such as “All go into one place; all are of the dust ; and all turn to dust
again.” (Ecclesiastic iii, 20). Dusty
has reference to ‘dust to dust’ of the
burial service. Death reduces man to dust from which he has come.
👉Imageries and Symbols in
Shakespeare's Macbeth
👉Macbeth Book Review, Synopsis
Macbeth meditates on life and thinks that life is a vanity
of vanities, pompous and insubstantial pageant. He uses a series of metaphors.
He has compared life to a book which is dull and monotonous till the final
catastrophe is reached. The he switches
to another metaphor.
“Out, out, brief candle!”
Now life is compared to a candle, a flickering spark
which burns for short time. Life is light which is put out. Lady Macbeth’s life
has been extinguished. Here ‘brief candle’ signifies the transient flame of
human life. “The Light shall be dark in the dwelling, and his candle shall be
put out with him.” (Book of Job, xxi, 17)
“Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player,
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more”
Life is then compared to ‘walking shadow’, an
unsubstantial object which has no importance to eternity.
“Poor player”, the very image is also suggested by
shadow. Poor player does not mean a bad actor, but one has to be pitied because
his appearance on the stage of life is brief.
It refers to
insignificant actor, who for a moment moves about on the stage with pomp, pride
and passion showcasing his vain mundane glory for a short period of his part
and then is forgotten by all.
“It is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.”
Also life is compared to a noisy and buzzing speech of an idiotic lunatic. It is senseless story told by a stupid full of strong words and gestures but wanting in sense – a meaningless verbiage.
The theme of false appearance is revived. Macbeth is
pessimistic and cynical because he sees life as deceitful. The poetry of the
line is so fine that we are deluded to think that Shakespeare is expressing his
philosophy. Macbeth is pessimistic for his delusions and hopelessness, but Shakespeare
is not pessimistic at all. He shows the spiritual recovery of a hero.
Macbeth has realised the futile running after
ambitions and endeavours. He has lost the world but gained his soul. The lines
mark his redemption. Macbeth suffers a poignant sense of loneliness. He wanted
to gain the throne and make himself safe by destroying and defying others. But all
his efforts ended in utter frustration. But he does not give away to despair. We
are moved by Macbeth’s isolation and loneliness despite his wickedness.
Catullus says “For us, once our brief candle is out,
waits a sheer night of unending sleep.” Seneca says in his Troads, “After death itself is naught even death itself is
naught.”
~~~~~*~~~~~
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