The word "blood" appears over 40 times in Shakespeare's play Macbeth, often used symbolically to represent guilt, violence, and the consequences of Macbeth's actions.
Never. He does say the word "blood" fifteen times, and "bloody" another five. But not "blood on my hands". He does say "There's blood on thy face" to the murderer who kills Banquo. The closest he comes to talking about blood on his hands is "Will all great Neptune's ocean wash the blood clean from my hand."
Blood represents life physically and spiritually. Physically if there is no blood in the body we cannot survive and as christians it is Jesus blood that was shed that we may have life. It is blood in the Bible that represented the passover. In the book of Exodus when the blood was put over the door post and on the side of the doors death passed over.
No it is Lady Macbeth that smears the guards with blood because Macbeth does not want to go back, so she goes and does it instead.
The ghost of Banquo appears to Macbeth one time during the banquet scene in Shakespeare's play "Macbeth."
Macbeth is telling Banquo's ghost not to shake his head at him. Banquo knows that Macbeth had him killed and is filling Macbeth's heart with shame but shaking his gory locks at him. His face is covered in blood and he has many gashes on his head, which is where the blood/gore would be coming from.
Blood appears on the dagger; Lady Macbeth also sees blood on her hands as she sleepwalks.
In Shakespeare's play "Macbeth," King Duncan was stabbed multiple times by Macbeth in his sleep. The exact number of stab wounds is not specified in the text.
The characters in Macbeth often use similar imagery to convey themes such as darkness, deception, and ambition. Both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, for example, use references to blood, night, and snakes to illustrate the moral decay and psychological turmoil they experience throughout the play. These shared images form a cohesive tapestry that underscores the supernatural elements and tragic consequences of their actions.
MacBeth mistakenly took his dagger with him after killing the king. Lady MacBeth then proceeds to take them back when MacBeth will not. She also smears blood on the chamberlains who are drunk. MacBeth then goes to wash his hands and he can't seem to wash the blood off.
Lady Macbeth suggests that Macbeth should wash Duncan's blood off his hands with water, stating that "a little water clears us of this deed." She believes that simply washing the blood away will remove the guilt associated with the murder.
"Blood" is a recurring image throughout the play Macbeth. Shakespeare frequently used a particular image repeatedly in the same play (see the use of the word "star" in Romeo and Juliet). The blood is sometimes real (as is Duncan's blood on the hands of Mr. and Mrs. Macbeth or on the face of the first murderer) or imaginary (as in Lady Macbeth's dream) or purely symbolic (as in the spirit who is a "bloody child", or the blood into which Macbeth he has stepped so far that to return were as tedious as go o'er, or the blood of Macduff's family with which Macbeth says his soul is charged.
Lady Macbeth