The Importance Of Blood In Macbeth

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Macbeth is a piece of Shakespeare that will last forever. It is a tale of manipulation, murder, deceit, and a man falling into all these traps. A man whose quest for the throne turns him into a murder, his conscious gets consumed by bloodshed and greed. Shakespeare uses blood in a symbolic way throughout the story. Being that the story weighs heavily on blood and guilt, blood represents life at the beginning of the play and then turns into guilt throughout the story. Not only Macbeths guilt but also lady Macbeths guilt toward the end of the story as the characters Morality switch throughout the story. When Macbeth is manipulated to finally kill Duncan towards the middle of the play he already starts to show signs of guilt with the representation of blood. “Will all …show more content…

No, this my hand will rather The multitudinous seas incarnadine making the green one red.” (Act II, scene iii, line 78) In this line Macbeth is saying after killing Duncan that there is so much blood on his hands that if he tried to wash them in the ocean the ocean would turn red which represents him never being able to wash his guilt away from killing Duncan. Lady Macbeth shows her guilt but not until its to late. In act 4 of the play the Doctor watches Lady Macbeth as sleep walks to the bathroom and tries to wash the blood from her hands. “Out, damned spot! Out, I say! One , two why, then, tis time do’t hell is murky Fie, my lord, Fie! A soldier and afeared? What need we” (Act V scene I line 39 ) Lady Macbeth starts to become sick with guilt as she tries to wash away the blood on her hands as she

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