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Essay On Blood Motif In Macbeth

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In Shakespeare's Macbeth, the frequent chronicle of the use of blood happens to be the most significant motif and prevails against any other motif in regards to having a unique ability to reveal truth about a character in every realm. In this tragedy, blood is used to show change in the character Macbeth from a great war hero, an outstanding leader, and a man worthy of respect and honor, to him becoming nothing more than a tyrannical, evil, hollow shell of a human being. This morbid transformation occurs swiftly from beginning to end, and shines a holy, vivid light on the dark and stormy heart of Macbeth each step of the way. Initially, blood is used to represent Macbeth’s deceit and literal back stabbing of the guards of King Duncan, as well …show more content…
Yet, blood carries a different meaning at this point in the tragedy of Macbeth. Blood has now come to mean exactly what Macbeth his feeling...guilt for the death of an innocent person for his own selfish gains. Macbeth’s internal guilt is clearly present when it is said that, “Will all great Neptune’s ocean wash this blood clean from my hands?”(Mac.II.v.78-79). Macbeth knows innocent blood is literally and metaphorically on his own hands for the deeds he has done. Blood in this situation shows the stain on Macbeth’s mind for all his days to come until his very own death. Something else even more notable is when Macbeth summons the last ounce of regret and sorrow in him to utter the phrase, “Here lay Duncan, His silver skin laced with his golden blood” (Mac.II.v.130-131). Macbeth claim that Duncan’s blood was ‘golden’ alludes to what the color gold means. The color gold represents illumination, love, compassion, and wisdom. Not a single meaning of the color gold is now associated with Macbeth, because in Macbeth there is no light or illumination, love, or compassion for a single person. Macbeth’s blood can only be characterized as the exact opposite of having ‘golden blood’ of the once great King

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