Symbolism Of Blood In Macbeth

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The constant presence of blood signifies the introspection of Macbeth’s consequences. Imaginary blood entitles the guilt and uneasiness Macbeth faces. It is not until after the murder of Duncan, does his guilt become transparent. Macbeth embellishes and exaggerates the idea, "will all great Neptune's ocean wash this blood/ Clean from my hand? No, this my hand will rather/ The multitudinous seas incarnadine,/ Making the green one red" (II. ii. 56-60). He evokes his guilt from the sight of his bloody hands. He contemplates if his sin will ever be purified and restored to virtue. The constant and recurring images of blood intensifies the feelings of fear, terror, and pain; as Macbeth pictures himself, “gazing, rigid with horror at his own …show more content…

The ghost symbolizes an illusion of his vicious subconscious and the fear that completely overwhelms him. The appearance of the ghost reveals to readers his mental disturbance. The sight of the ghost makes him lose his self-control and he blusters, “what man dare, I dare. /Approach though like the rugged Russian bear,/The armed rhinoceros, or th' Hyrcan tiger;/ Take any shape but that, and my firm nerves/ Shall never tremble" (III. IV. 99-103). He fears the sight of his bloody friend, but is brave enough to face any other horrific creature. He shows bravado due to the fact that he does not want to reveal his phobia of guilt and terror, as he faces the thought of murder. After seeing Banquo’s bloody ghost, he realizes, “what opposes him is blood in one aspect-call it nature in the sense that he opposes nature-and that this opposing force thrusts him into shedding more blood: 'It will have blood, they say; blood will have blood” (Bloom 175). ‘It’ refers to any threatening adversary that stands as an obstacle to his throne and, the ‘second blood’ is all that Macbeth can experience. The image of the antipathy of blood pushes his desires to kill and causes more distress. With his overpowering imagination, “the usurper Macbeth moves in a consistent phantasmagoria of blood: blood is the prime constituent of his imagination” (Bloom

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