Boswell reports that eight or ten days before Dr. Johnson’s death, in a state “low and desponding,” his friend was visited by his physician, Dr. Richard Brocklesby. Johnson tells the doctor, “I have been as a dying man all night” and then “emphatically broke out in the words of Shakespeare”:
“Canst thou
not minister to a mind diseased,
Pluck from
the memory a rooted sorrow,
Raze out the
written troubles of the brain
And with
some sweet oblivious antidote
Cleanse the
stuff’d bosom of that perilous stuff
Which weighs
upon the heart?”
This is Macbeth
speaking to the doctor in Act V, Scene 2. “To which,” Boswell writes, “Dr.
Brocklesby readily answer’d, from the same great poet”: “Therein the patient / must
minister to himself.” Johnson was pleased: “[H]e expressed himself much
satisfied with the application.”
In the play,
Macbeth had asked for a report on his wife’s medical condition, and the doctor
tells him: “Not so sick, my lord, / As she is troubled with thick-coming
fancies / That keep her from her rest.” In other words, Lady Macbeth, tormented
by guilt for the crimes she and her husband have committed, is going nuts, which suggests she might actually have a conscience. Meanwhile, the camouflaged Scottish rebels and Malcolm’s army advance on
Dunsinane.
Some would find Johnson quoting Macbeth on his deathbed pedantic or pretentious, I
suppose. He had edited the plays and cited Shakespeare more than any other
writer in his Dictionary. Finger-tip
quotability came to him naturally. He had what the poet Wiley Clements called a
“Bodleian mind.” That’s what’s meant by this blog’s motto: “the intersection of
books and life.” A serious reader has a long memory and doesn’t think of a book
as quarantined from the rest of life. My middle son has been reading
The Gulag Archipelago, which reminds
me of what Solzhenitsyn had to say about Shakespeare's villains in the first volume:
“Macbeth’s
self-justifications were feeble—and his conscience devoured him. Yes, even Iago
was a little lamb, too. The imagination and the spiritual strength of
Shakespeare’s villains stopped short at a dozen corpses. Because they had no
ideology.
“Ideology—that is what gives villainy its long-sought justification and gives the villain the necessary steadfastness and determination . . . Thanks to ideology, the twentieth century was fated to experience villainy on a scale calculated in the millions.”
Johnson died
on this date, December 13, in 1784 at age seventy-five.
2 comments:
Two men spontaneously quoting Shakespeare to each other - not the sort of thing you'd probably see in today's increasingly illiterate culture. How educational standards have dropped! Even when I was in high school (1967-1970), I was not required to read Shakespeare in any of my English courses.
Excellent associations here: Johnson, Shakespeare, Solzhenitsyn.
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