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Paul McCartney reveals how William Shakespeare inspired ‘Let It Be’

Paul McCartney has opened up about the creation of The Beatles classic ‘Let It Be’, which he says was influenced on a subconscious level by the works of William Shakespeare.

The Fab Four track was derived from a dream where McCartney was met by his late mother who reassured him. At the time, the singer-songwriter was undergoing a great level of stress as The Beatles began to reach their inevitable conclusion, and he found himself lost within the harsh trappings of the music industry.

Now, in a new episode of his podcast, Paul McCartney: A Life in Lyrics, McCartney has explained how the title of the track was etched on his mind thanks to Shakespeare. Reflecting on his younger years, McCartney said: “In those days [at school], I had to learn speeches off by heart. So I could still do a bit of ‘to be or not to be’, or ‘O that this too too solid flesh’.”

McCartney continued: “And it had been pointed out to me recently that Hamlet, when he has been poisoned, he actually says, ‘Let it be’ – act five, scene two. He says ‘Let be’ the first time, then the second time he says, ‘Had I but time — as this fell sergeant, Death, Is strict in his arrest — oh, I could tell you. But let it be Horatio.’”

The Beatle concluded: “I was interested that I was exposed to those words during a time when I was studying Shakespeare so that years later the phrase appears to me in a dream with my mother saying it.”

McCartney’s mother, Mary McCartney, died in 1956 following a battle with pancreatic cancer when he was aged 14. John Lennon also lost his mother in tragic circumstances as a teenager, which led to the duo being bonded by grief.

Listen to the full episode on ‘Let It Be’ below.

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