The narrator of the story is known simply as the boy. Like the heroes in many of Dahl's other stories, the narrator is a brave, kind and intelligent child.
blood.
Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] and his Lady [b. c. 1015] planned to blame the two royal guards for the untimely death of King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040] of Scotland. Lady Macbeth was supposed to serve the guards drugged drinks, to keep them from protecting their sovereign. Macbeth was supposed to kill the sleeping, unarmed King and then the passed out, defenseless guards. The bloodied murder weapons were supposed to be left at the crime scene with the bloodied corpses. The crime scene was supposed to tell a tale of a king killed by his drunken guards and avenged by his outraged host. And that was what happened and how the royal guest chamber was made to look, in Act 2 Scene 2 of the Shakespearean play.
Killed himself by stabbing himself repeatedly through the heart and then going out to where his servants were sleeping and wiping his blood all over them, perhaps? Or maybe their plan was to make it look like his servants had killed him.
Two Guards are smeared in blood and knocked out. When they are conious they exucuated!!!!
No it is Lady Macbeth that smears the guards with blood because Macbeth does not want to go back, so she goes and does it instead.
Blood appears on the dagger; Lady Macbeth also sees blood on her hands as she sleepwalks.
She takes the daggers back to King Duncans chamber, wipes the blood from the daggers onto the Unconscious guards, and leaves the daggers beside them, so that when the body of the king was found it would seem that the guards where guilty of treason.
The characters in Macbeth often use similar imagery to convey themes such as darkness, deception, and ambition. Both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth, for example, use references to blood, night, and snakes to illustrate the moral decay and psychological turmoil they experience throughout the play. These shared images form a cohesive tapestry that underscores the supernatural elements and tragic consequences of their actions.
MacBeth mistakenly took his dagger with him after killing the king. Lady MacBeth then proceeds to take them back when MacBeth will not. She also smears blood on the chamberlains who are drunk. MacBeth then goes to wash his hands and he can't seem to wash the blood off.
Macbeth is concerned about the blood on his hands because he couldn't believe that he had really killed King Duncan. He says that no amount of water could wash away the blood, because washing the blood away couldn't bring the King back. Blood represents the guilt, and this is where we get the phrase "to have blood on one's hands". He's done something he can't turn back and has to live with the consequences and guilt that will follow for the rest of his life.
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.