Invisible Shakespeare: Shakespeare in Adam Smith
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__________________________________________________________________
Sarah
Skwire
Invisible
Shakespeare
:
Shakespeare
in
Adam
Smith
Readers
of
Adam
Smith
’
s
Theory
of
Moral
Sentiments
(
TMS
)
are
barely
four
paragraphs
into
the
work
before
Smith
moves
from
describing
the
ways
in
which
observing
the
sufferings
and
joys
of
our
fellow
humans
affect
us
to
discussing
how
interacting
with
literature
replicates
these
same
effects
:
Our
joy
for
the
deliverance
of
those
heroes
of
tragedy
or
romance
who
interest
us
,
is
as
sincere
as
our
grief
for
their
distress
,
and
our
fellow-feeling
with
their
misery
is
not
more
real
than
that
with
their
happiness
.
We
enter
into
their
gratitude
towards
those
faithful
friends
who
did
not
desert
them
in
their
difficulties
;
and
we
heartily
go
along
with
their
resentment
against
those
perfidious
traitors
who
injured
,
abandoned
,
or
deceived
them
.
1
We
see
Smith
turn
to
literature
as
an
analogue
for
lived
experience
throughout
TMS
.
A
little
later
,
when
he
reminds
readers
that
we
seem
to
have
a
built-in
1
Adam
Smith
,
The
Theory
of
Moral
Sentiments
(
Glasgow
Edition
of
the
Works
and
Correspondence
of
Adam
Smith
,
vol
.
1
),
ed
.
D
.
D
.
Raphael
and
A
.
L
.
Macfie
(
Indianapolis
:
Liberty
Fund
,
1982
),
p
.
10
.
Publicado
originalmente
en
Laissez-Faire
,
No
.
38-39
(
Marzo-Sept
2013
):
17-24
.
measuring
stick
for
injustice
,
Smith
turns
to
literature
as
an
example
:
“
The
villain
,
in
a
tragedy
or
romance
,
is
as
much
the
object
of
our
indignation
,
as
the
hero
is
that
of
our
sympathy
and
affection
.
We
detest
Iago
as
much
as
we
esteem
Othello
;
and
delight
as
much
in
the
punishment
of
the
one
,
as
we
are
grieved
at
the
distress
of
the
other
.”
2
And
when
he
explains
the
way
we
realize
our
general
rules
about
human
behavior
,
he
points
out
that
it
is
partially
as
a
result
of
our
responses
“
when
we
read
in
history
or
romance
.”
3
Charles
Griswold
’
s
Adam
Smith
and
the
Virtues
of
Enlightenment
points
to
the
strong
appeal
that
literature
had
for
Smith
as
a
way
to
speak
about
important
contemporary
moral
concerns
:
“
Not
only
plays
,
novels
,
and
poems
but
tragedies
,
in
particular
,
intrigue
Smith
.
Together
they
completely
overwhelm
his
relatively
rare
references
to
properly
philosophical
texts
.
…
The
notion
that
we
are
to
understand
literature
and
drama
as
sources
for
moral
theory
and
moral
education
is
clearly
and
strikingly
evident
in
The
Wealth
of
Nations
as
well
.”
4
This
attraction
towards
2
Ibid
.,
p
.
34
.
3
Ibid
.,
p
.
160
.
4
Charles
L
.
Griswold
,
Adam
Smith
and
the
Laissez-Faire
,
No
.
60
(
Octubre
2033
):
41-48
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__________________________________________________________________
the
literary
as
source
material
for
moral
arguments
is
easily
seen
simply
by
leafing
through
the
footnotes
to
any
of
Smith
’
s
works
.
His
references
to
literature
are
myriad
and
most
have
been
welldocumented
.
In
Economic
Sentiments
Emma
Rothschild
outlines
the
most
famous
of
the
references
when
she
examines
the
connection
between
Smith
’
s
idea
of
the
“
invisible
hand
”
and
the
workings
of
the
same
idea
in
Macbeth
.
She
writes
:
The
earlier
intellectual
history
of
invisible
hands
turns
out
to
be
generally
grim
.
The
most
famous
invisible
hand
in
Anglo-Scottish
literature
is
that
of
Macbeth
’
s
providence
.
“
And
with
thy
bloody
and
invisible
hand
,”
Macbeth
apostrophizes
the
night
in
Act
III
,
immediately
before
the
banquet
and
Banquo
’
s
murder
;
he
asks
the
darkness
to
cover
up
the
crimes
he
is
about
to
commit
:
Come
,
seeling
night
,
Scarf
up
the
tender
eye
of
pitiful
day
,
And
with
thy
bloody
and
invisible
hand
Cancel
and
tear
to
pieces
that
great
bond
Which
keeps
me
pale
.
5
In
addition
to
explicit
quotations
from
literature
—
like
this
use
of
the
invisible
hand
—
Smith
’
s
writing
,
steeped
in
poetry
,
novels
,
and
drama
as
it
is
,
often
draws
from
the
storehouse
of
his
memory
to
allude
to
or
quote
from
literature
.
For
example
,
in
his
discussion
of
pride
,
Smith
notes
that
:
The
proud
man
is
commonly
too
well
contented
with
himself
to
think
that
his
character
requires
any
amendment
.
The
man
who
feels
himself
all-perfect
,
naturally
enough
despises
all
further
improvement
.
His
self-sufficiency
and
absurd
conceit
of
his
own
superiority
,
commonly
attend
him
from
his
youth
to
his
most
advanced
age
;
and
he
dies
,
as
Hamlet
says
,
with
all
his
sins
upon
his
head
,
unanointed
,
unanealed
.
6
The
quotation
from
Hamlet
is
apt
and
interesting
,
but
equally
compelling
is
the
observation
,
in
the
footnotes
to
the
Glasgow
edition
,
that
“
Smith
is
misquoting
from
memory
.
It
is
the
Ghost
,
not
Hamlet
,
who
speaks
thus
of
his
own
death
:
Cut
off
even
in
the
blossoms
of
my
sin
,
Unhousell
’
d
,
disappointed
,
unaneled
;
No
reckoning
made
,
but
sent
to
my
account
With
all
my
imperfections
on
my
head
:
(
Hamlet
,
i
.
v
.
76
–
9
.)”
7
“
Unanointed
”
is
an
ideal
example
of
the
kind
of
“
memory
skip
”
that
happens
when
someone
who
knows
another
writer
’
s
works
well
quotes
from
memory
.
The
word
makes
sense
in
context
and
is
a
portmanteau
of
Shakespeare
’
s
actual
words
—“
unhousell
’
d
”
and
“
disappointed
.”
Smith
misquotes
similarly
in
his
Lectures
on
Rhetoric
and
Belle
Lettres
(
though
it
is
worth
remembering
that
these
are
student
’
s
notes
on
Smith
’
s
lectures
and
the
errors
may
not
be
his
).
He
refers
at
one
point
to
“
the
slings
and
arrows
of
adverse
Fortune
,”
8
and
later
to
6
Smith
,
The
Theory
of
Moral
Sentiments
,
pp
.
258-59
.
Virtues
of
Enlightenment
(
Cambridge
:
Cambridge
University
Press
,
1999
),
p
.
59
.
5
Emma
Rothschild
,
Economic
Sentiments
:
Adam
Smith
,
Condorcet
,
and
the
Enlightenment
(
Cambridge
,
MA
:
Harvard
University
7
Ibid
.
(
note
).
8
Adam
Smith
,
Lectures
on
Rhetoric
and
Belles
Lettres
(
Glasgow
Edition
of
the
Works
and
Correspondence
of
Adam
Smith
,
vol
.
4
),
ed
.
J
.
C
.
Bryce
(
Indianapolis
:
Liberty
Fund
,
Press
,
2001
),
pp
.
118-19
.
1985
),
p
.
28
.
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42
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Shakespeare
’
s
comment
that
we
need
to
“
bravely
arm
ourselves
and
stem
a
sea
of
troubles
.”
9
Both
of
these
errors
are
precisely
the
kind
of
memory
skip
every
lecturer
has
made
,
particularly
when
lecturing
about
material
with
which
we
are
so
familiar
that
,
as
Smith
’
s
student
notes
of
Lecture
XXI
,
“
this
Lecture
was
delivered
intirely
without
Book
.”
10
This
particular
kind
of
mistake
suggests
that
Smith
had
a
particular
kind
of
relationship
with
Shakespeare
’
s
work
,
and
with
the
works
of
other
literary
figures
he
frequently
references
.
He
knows
these
works
the
way
that
many
economists
know
Hayek
or
Mises
.
They
are
a
part
of
his
mental
furniture
.
This
means
that
for
students
of
literature
who
turn
their
attention
to
Smith
,
there
is
a
sense
of
delight
—
but
no
surprise
—
to
find
Shakespeare
infusing
Smith
’
s
text
not
only
in
direct
references
and
passing
quotation
from
memory
,
but
also
in
a
series
of
buried
,
perhaps
half-conscious
or
unconscious
,
references
that
(
to
amuse
myself
)
I
am
calling
“
Invisible
Shakespeare
.”
hound
,
or
a
greyhound
from
a
spaniel
,
or
this
last
from
a
shepherd
’
s
dog
.
Those
different
tribes
of
animals
,
however
,
though
all
of
the
same
species
,
are
of
scarce
any
use
to
one
another
.
The
strength
of
the
mastiff
is
not
,
in
the
least
,
supported
either
by
the
swiftness
of
the
greyhound
,
or
by
the
sagacity
of
the
spaniel
,
or
by
the
docility
of
the
shepherd
’
s
dog
.
The
effects
of
those
different
geniuses
and
talents
,
for
want
of
the
power
or
disposition
to
barter
and
exchange
,
cannot
be
brought
into
a
common
stock
,
and
do
not
in
the
least
contribute
to
the
better
accommodations
and
conveniency
of
the
species
.
Each
animal
is
still
obliged
to
support
and
defend
itself
,
separately
and
independently
,
and
derives
no
sort
of
advantage
from
that
variety
of
talents
with
which
nature
has
distinguished
its
fellows
.
Among
men
,
on
the
contrary
,
the
most
dissimilar
geniuses
are
of
use
to
one
another
;
the
different
produces
of
their
respective
talents
,
by
the
general
disposition
to
truck
,
barter
,
and
exchange
,
being
brought
,
as
it
were
,
into
a
common
stock
,
where
every
man
may
purchase
whatever
part
of
the
produce
of
other
men
’
s
talents
he
has
occasion
for
.
11
Very
early
in
Adam
Smith
’
s
Wealth
of
Nations
the
reader
encounters
one
such
reference
,
previously
unnoted
in
Smith
scholarship
,
during
Smith
’
s
meditations
on
human
nature
as
demonstrated
in
comparison
with
the
nature
of
dogs
.
The
section
is
a
justly
famous
one
.
It
is
elegant
in
both
its
content
and
its
diction
as
well
as
in
its
explication
of
the
social
advantages
and
“
conveniency
”
that
arise
from
the
human
ability
to
“
truck
,
barter
,
and
exchange
”:
By
nature
a
philosopher
is
not
in
genius
and
disposition
half
so
different
from
a
street
porter
,
as
a
mastiff
is
from
a
grey-
9
Ibid
.,
pp
.
30-31
(
italics
added
).
This
passage
has
been
analyzed
often
.
What
has
gone
unnoticed
,
however
,
is
that
Smith
’
s
passage
alludes
to
an
equally
well-known
passage
from
Shakespeare
’
s
Macbeth
.
(
The
play
may
have
been
brought
to
Smith
’
s
mind
by
his
use
of
the
word
“
porter
”
early
on
in
the
passage
,
reminding
him
of
Macbeth
’
s
famous
Act
II
“
porter
scene
.”)
Suborning
Banquo
’
s
murder
in
Act
III
,
Macbeth
discusses
human
nature
with
the
murderers
for
hire
in
almost
precisely
the
same
terms
that
Smith
uses
in
the
above
passage
:
11
Adam
Smith
,
An
Inquiry
into
the
Nature
and
Causes
of
the
Wealth
of
Nations
(
Glasgow
Edition
of
the
Works
and
Correspondence
of
Adam
Smith
,
vol
.
1
),
ed
.
R
.
H
.
Campbell
,
A
.
S
.
Skinner
and
W
.
B
.
Todd
(
Indian-
10Ibid
.,
p
.
117
.
apolis
:
Liberty
Fund
,
1981
),
p
.
30
.
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43
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First
Murderer
:
We
are
men
,
my
Liege
.
Macbeth
:
Ay
,
in
the
catalogue
ye
go
for
men
;
As
hounds
and
greyhounds
,
mongrels
,
spaniels
,
curs
,
Shoughs
,
water-rugs
,
and
demiwolves
are
clept
All
by
the
name
of
dogs
:
the
valu
’
d
file
Distinguishes
the
swift
,
the
slow
,
the
subtle
,
The
housekeeper
,
the
hunter
,
every
one
According
to
the
gift
which
bounteous
Nature
Hath
in
him
clos
’
d
;
whereby
he
does
receive
Particular
addition
,
from
the
bill
That
writes
them
all
alike
:
and
so
of
men
.
(
Macbeth
,
3
.
1
.
90-100
)
The
similarity
of
wording
,
of
subject
matter
,
even
of
the
dog
breeds
mentioned
make
it
clear
that
as
Smith
wrote
his
passage
on
dogs
and
human
nature
,
Shakespeare
’
s
lines
were
in
his
mind
.
Thus
,
it
was
a
great
pleasure
to
find
another
apparent
reference
to
Macbeth
in
TMS
.
In
his
section
on
“
The
Effects
of
Prosperity
and
Adversity
upon
the
Judgment
of
Mankind
with
regard
to
the
Propriety
of
Action
”
Smith
gives
an
extended
account
of
the
dangerous
risks
associated
with
desiring
too
rapid
and
easy
a
rise
to
a
position
of
wealth
and
esteem
:
To
attain
to
this
envied
situation
,
the
candidates
for
fortune
too
frequently
abandon
the
paths
of
virtue
;
for
unhappily
,
the
road
which
leads
to
the
one
,
and
that
which
leads
to
the
other
,
lie
sometimes
in
very
opposite
directions
.
But
the
ambitious
man
flatters
himself
that
,
in
the
splendid
situation
to
which
he
advances
,
he
will
have
so
many
means
of
commanding
the
respect
and
admiration
of
mankind
,
and
will
be
enabled
to
act
with
such
superior
propriety
and
grace
,
that
the
lustre
of
his
future
conduct
will
entirely
cover
,
or
efface
,
the
foulness
of
the
steps
by
which
he
arrived
at
that
elevation
.
In
many
governments
the
candidates
for
the
highest
stations
are
above
the
law
;
and
,
if
they
can
attain
the
object
of
their
ambition
,
they
have
no
fear
of
being
called
to
account
for
the
means
by
which
they
acquired
it
.
They
often
endeavour
,
therefore
,
not
only
by
fraud
and
falsehood
,
the
ordinary
and
vulgar
arts
of
intrigue
and
cabal
;
but
sometimes
by
the
perpetration
of
the
most
enormous
crimes
,
by
murder
and
assassination
,
by
rebellion
and
civil
war
,
to
supplant
and
destroy
those
who
oppose
or
stand
in
the
way
of
their
greatness
.
They
more
frequently
miscarry
than
succeed
;
and
commonly
gain
nothing
but
the
disgraceful
punishment
which
is
due
to
their
crimes
.
But
,
though
they
should
be
so
lucky
as
to
attain
that
wished-for
greatness
,
they
are
always
most
miserably
disappointed
in
the
happiness
which
they
expect
to
enjoy
in
it
.
It
is
not
ease
or
pleasure
,
but
always
honour
,
of
one
kind
or
another
,
though
frequently
an
honour
very
ill
understood
,
that
the
ambitious
man
really
pursues
.
But
the
honour
of
his
exalted
station
appears
,
both
in
his
own
eyes
and
in
those
of
other
people
,
polluted
and
defiled
by
the
baseness
of
the
means
through
which
he
rose
to
it
.
Though
by
the
profusion
of
every
liberal
expence
;
though
by
excessive
indulgence
in
every
profligate
pleasure
,
the
wretched
,
but
usual
,
resource
of
ruined
characters
;
though
by
the
hurry
of
public
business
,
or
by
the
prouder
and
more
dazzling
tumult
of
war
,
he
may
endeavour
to
efface
,
both
from
his
own
memory
and
from
that
of
other
people
,
the
remembrance
of
what
he
has
done
;
that
remembrance
never
fails
to
pursue
him
.
He
invokes
in
vain
the
dark
and
dismal
powers
of
forgetfulness
and
oblivion
.
He
remembers
himself
what
he
has
done
,
and
that
remembrance
tells
him
that
other
people
must
likewise
remember
it
.
Amidst
all
the
gaudy
pomp
of
the
most
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