Page:Macbethandkingr00kembgoog.djvu/89

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[74]

every moment of my life here, and condemn me to never-ending torments hereafter, only to raise the descendants of Banquo to the throne.—Never.—I here oppose myself to the prediction; and resolve, through whatever dangers I must run, by the extirpation of the whole race to baffle the decrees of destiny itself.

Macbeth, then, does not plunge into fresh crimes, in order to get rid of (personal) fear:[1] Ambition impelled him to the murder of Duncan; and ambition still,—and no other motive,—urges him to the destruction of Banquo and Fleance; because

  1. Remarks, p. 39.