Lady Macbeth says "Out, damned spot! out, I say!" while washing blood off her hands. She is tormented by guilt and is hallucinating the bloodstains that symbolize her role in the murder of King Duncan.
She became obsessed with washing her hands to get the smell of blood out of them.
Lady Macbeth suggests that Macbeth should wash Duncan's blood off his hands with water, stating that "a little water clears us of this deed." She believes that simply washing the blood away will remove the guilt associated with the murder.
The "filthy witness" which Lady Macbeth talks about washing from Macbeth's hands is, of course, Duncan's blood. "Filthy" because it is dirty and smells unpleasant. (Have you ever been covered in blood?) "Witness" because its presence on his hands marks him as the murderer--it testifies against him.
Blood appears on the dagger; Lady Macbeth also sees blood on her hands as she sleepwalks.
lady Macbeth
The blood on Macbeth and Lady Macbeth's hands symbolizes guilt and the consequences of their violent actions. It serves as a manifestation of their moral corruption and their inability to wash away their guilt or the sins they have committed.็บขThe blood becomes a powerful symbol of their inner turmoil and descent into madness.
Lady Macbeth is traumatized from the events that followed the killing of Duncan. She is most affected by the blood that was on her hands which she repeatedly washes in her sleep.
Lady Macbeth sees the blood of Duncan on her hands, and is unable to remove it, which symbolizes her inability to discard the guilt she feels for his murder.
Macbeth was both a man and a monster because he changes between the story and is loyal at the beginning but gets more violent at the end so we can safely say that Macbeth is a man AND a monster
The Doctor and Gentlewoman watch Lady Macbeth sleepwalk. She incessantly rubs her hands together, trying to wash off imaginary spots of blood. The blood represents her guilt that she is unable to shake off.
The blood on his hands. He's worried that it will never wash off.
Lady Macbeth [b. c. 1015] rubbed her hands together while she sleepwalked. She appeared to be trying to clean them of something. At the same time, she talked about getting out drops of blood. She also spoke of the murders of King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040], Banquo, and Lady Macduff. It was ironic that she behaved in such a fashion. In Act 2 Scene 2, she told her anguished husband that cleansing himself of the King's murder was as easy as washing his hands. She also said that thinking about the murder would drive him insane. In Act 5 Scene 1, Lady Macbeth learned that ridding herself of guilt wasn't as easy as washing her hands. Neither was it so easy to stop thinking of heinous acts. She couldn't stop her thoughts. Washing her hands didn't wash away her guilt. So she took her own advice and lost first her mind and then her life.