The Dog in thy barn
...loating in the air leading him to Duncan"s room and he sees "on the blade and dudgeon gouts of blood", indicating that the knife has been visciously and violently stabbed into someone. The next reference, in Scene 2, is when Lady Macbeth smears the blood from the dagger on the faces and hands of the sleeping servants "I’ll guild the faces of the grooms withal, for it must seem their guilt". This is another evil reference to blood, setting up the innocent servants of the king. Again, blood is referred to when Malcolm and Donaldbain are discussing what to do and Malcolm says: "there’s daggers in men’s smiles: the nearer in blood, the nearer bloody." Meaning that their closest relatives are likely to kill them. Again, blood imagery is being used. In Act 5, Scene 1, the sleepwalking scene, while Lady Macbeth is sleepwalking, there are constant references to the evil deeds that Macbeth and herself have committed, most of which include references to blood imagery. She goes through the motions of washing her hand...