preview

How Is Blood Shown In Macbeth

Decent Essays

William Shakespeare wrote the play Macbeth around 1606. During the play, Macbeth is told prophecies by three witches and he does everything in his power to make sure he becomes the king, as they proclaimed, including murder. Him and his wife, Lady Macbeth, conspire to kill multiple people including Macbeth’s friend Banquo, King Duncan, as well as a few others. In the end, he is defeated by Macduff because of his failure to interpret three apparitions the witches provide for Macbeth. Like most of Shakespeare's works, Macbeth included blood imagery to represent other themes in the play. These multiple themes include guilt, violence, and family. Blood is used often to represent other things besides the obvious, death. First, both Lady Macbeth and Macbeth feel guilt throughout their killing spree, though they try their best not to show one another. Macbeth asks himself, “Will all great Neptune’s ocean wash this blood / Clean from my hand?” and answers with no, as he knows that nothing can be done now that him and his wife have plotted against and killed King Duncan. (2.2.60-61) His deed could be hidden, but not washed away from his hands or his conscious. Even …show more content…

Macbeth speaks of King Duncan in 2.3 when he says, “The spring, the head, the fountain of your blood / Is stopped; the very source of it is stopped.” He tells Donalbain and Malcolm that their father was killed by saying that the source of where they received their blood has stopped living. He uses blood to explain their relationship as a family. The two brothers, their father, the king, dead, decide to flee to Ireland because Donalbain tells Malcolm, “Where we are, / There’s daggers in men’s smiles. The near in blood, / The nearer bloody.” In saying this he meant that the most likely to kill them next were their closest relatives. He convinced his brother to leave at once, and not be next to die at the hands of someone close to them, plotting their

Get Access