Great book on Macbeth. Bloom knows his subject. He goes through the play almost line-by-line, sharing his commentary.
An index would have been a great addition.
Recommended!
p. 5: The motto of Macbeth, both play and person, could well be: "And nothing is, but what is not."
p. 8: Long ago I remember characterizing the Macbeths as the happiest marriage in Shakespeare. That can be seen a grim jest, yet it is veracious.
p. 8: Lady Macbeth is a widow.
p. 9: Shakespeare is a great master of ellipses, of leaving things out. He relies upon our mature imaginations to fill out what is only suggested.
p. 11: In a drama of two thousand lines, "time" is employed in fifty-one instances.
p 22: When Banquo departs, Macbeth suffers a hallucinatory soliloquy:
Act 2, Scene 1, Lines 33-39
MACBETH:
Is this a dagger which I see before me,
The handle toward my hand? Come, let me clutch thee.
I have thee not, and yet I see thee still.
Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible
To feeling as to sight? Or art thou but
A dagger of the mind, a false creation
Proceeding from the heat-oppressèd brain?
p. 28: Act 2, Scene 2, Lines 34-35
LADY MACBETH:
These deeds must not be thought
After these ways; so, it will make us mad.
She is prophetic and indeed will go mad, yet he will not. It fascinates me that she is the stronger of the two in will and audacity, yet the cost of that will gradually diminishes her. Macbeth, virtually useless in this aftermath, will recover and surge on from enormity to enorimity.
p. 33: The wonderful ironies of the Porter are antiphonal to the incessant knocking at the gate.
"alternate or responsive singing by a choir in two divisions."
p. 47: Colmekill is the island of Iona
p. 61: The third murderer is a spy sent by Macbeth.
p. 64: The escape of Fleance is the onset of the fall of Macbeth.
p. 68: Unique among Shakespeare's ghosts, the spirit of Banquo is voiceless, but its nod is eloquent.
p. 80: The word "strange" is used twenty times in this short play.
p. 80: Indirectly, Lennox accuses Macbeth of both assassinations, Duncan's and Banquo's.
P. 85: To analyze it would be pedantic.
p. 88: The augmenting blood-madness of Macbeth befits this drama, where "blood" or "bloody" occurs forty-one times, second only to "time" itself. He begins to believe that anyone alive must be killed, children in particular.
p. 95: threnody: a poem, speech, or song of lamentation, especially for the dead; dirge; funeral song. (dictionary.com)
p. 101: Some critics condemn the next scene (4.3), where Malcolm and Macduff, in the proximity of the court of King Edward the Conessor, have a rather long and complex exchange.
-- Critics like me!
p. 113: There is a prolepsis of Macbeth's doom by the sword of Macduff.
"the representation of something in the future as if it already existed or had occurred" (dictionary.com)
p. 134: The younger Siward is the final sacrifice to Macbeth's fury.