Macbeth and Lady Macbeth both have scenes in which they are transfixed by the sight of blood on their hands. The first incidence in which Macbeth says "Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand? Come, let me clutch thee." (2.1.33-34.) …show more content…
The play on the word "hands" show that Macbeth feels guilty and is aware of what he is doing is wrong. He is aware that he is guilty of an unforgivable act and that there is no way he can change this. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth have actually committed a horrendous crime and now they are faced with the reality of the consequences of his crime. Lady Macbeth 's scene with the bloody hands also signifies guilt. "Here 's the smell of the blood still. All the perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little hand." (5.1.53-55) All these scenes in which both main characters are transfixed by the sight of blood on their hands represents their guilt that lies on their hands and can not be washed away. Shakespeare cleverly takes us into the minds of the characters through this word play of "hands" The play of the "word" hand throughout the play signifies true heart 's intentions. Throughout many scenes in the play characters are said to uncover their true intentions by their hands. Lady Macbeth repeatedly tells her husband to appear to be something he isn 't. Also in many instances the characters look at …show more content…
Since the play was written during Elizabethan times in which to be named King you were appointed by God. When you killed a king you went against God and sided with evil so it is almost like Macbeth commits cardinal sin. It is so bad that he will never be able to clean his hands of the blood, more symbolically cleanse himself of the guilt and have a clear conscience. If he even tried to clean his hands there would be so much blood that it would turn the oceans red with blood of the King. "Will all great Neptune 's oceans wash this blood Clean from my hand? No; this my hand will rather the multitudinous seas incarnadine, Making the green one red." (II, II, 77-80). Now Macbeth must suffer the consequences of having fallen into a pool of darkness which he can 't come out of. Thus, the play on the word "hand" evokes a moral message of not getting caught up in a pool of blood and darkness. Thus, the play gives one the reader a moral message of being careful of deeds that one does because one doesn 't want to fall into a trap of