What can the performance of a single play on one specific night tell us about the world this event inhabited so briefly? Alexander Nemerov takes a performance of Macbeth in Washington,
DC on October 17, 1863-with Abraham Lincoln in attendance- to explore this question and illuminate American art, politics, technology, and life as it was being lived. Nemerov's inspiration is
Wallace Stevens and his poem "Anecdote of the Jar," in which a single object organizes the wilderness around it in the consciousness of the poet. For Nemerov, that evening's performance of
Macbeth reached across the tragedy of civil war to acknowledge the horrors and emptiness of a world it tried and ultimately failed to change. Nemerov introduces voices from diaries,
poems, newspapers, and journals, as well as visual images, to construct a panoramic view from the homes of Washington to the blasted battlefields of Virginia and back again to the single point
of Lady Macbeth's candle.