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Macbeth


             These ideas tend to go with each other. In life, blood most often represents something dirty. Most people get the shivers or cringe at the sight, or even the mention, of blood. The play Macbeth by William Shakespeare is an excellent portrayal of how blood only symbolizes filth. After each murder, the guilt of all the bloodshed increases. It also demonstrates how blood signifies guilt and its relation to dirtiness.
             Guilt is a large topic associated with blood. It is used at crime scenes to determine who was there. The term "caught red handed" comes from being caught with blood on a person's hands. Murderers have been convicted of murders by having blood of the victim somewhere on their person. When Macbeth and Lady Macbeth kill Duncan they frame the guards by putting the bloody daggers into the room of the guards. Beforehand, Lady Macbeth tells Macbeth to go frame the guards "and smear / The sleepy grooms with blood" (V,i). By smearing the blood of the daggers on the sleeping guards, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth manage to get away with murder.
             Blood is also seen as evil and frightening. This is most often because it is associated with death, which most people are afraid of. If someone were to see a pool of blood simply oozing through cracks of pavement out on the street, he or she would get pretty freaked out. In Macbeth, after Duncan is murdered, Malcolm and Donalbain talk of fleeing Scotland. They are afraid of what the people would do if they were of suspect for killing Duncan. Donalbain says to Malcolm, "Where we are, / There's daggers in men's smiles. The near in blood, / The nearer bloody" (II,iv). He refers to the people he is afraid of as "bloody" as though they could kill at any moment.
             Filth and dirtiness is also a though that comes to mind when thinking of blood. Blood is one of those things that always has to be washed off as soon as possible. Not very many people like to leave blood on them; it feels dirty and putrid.


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