Table of Contents
- 1 What does Lady Macbeth say about washing the blood from her hands?
- 2 Why is Lady Macbeth so obsessed with washing her hands?
- 3 What does Lady Macbeth mean when she tells Macbeth My hands are of your color but I shame to wear a heart so white?
- 4 What are Lady Macbeth quotes?
- 5 Why does she rub her hand and say out out damned spot?
- 6 What does Lady Macbeth say stopped her from killing Duncan?
What does Lady Macbeth say about washing the blood from her hands?
Lady Macbeth tells him to get some water to wash his hands. When Lady Macbeth returns from Duncan’s chamber she holds out her blood-stained hands and says, “My hands are of your colour, but I shame to wear a heart so white,” claiming that although she has Duncan’s blood on her hands she feels no guilt.
What does Macbeth say after washing his bloody hands?
‘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’ Macbeth (Act II, Sc. II). Macbeth laments in this passage that all the oceans in the world wouldn’t be capable of washing the blood from his hands.
Why is Lady Macbeth so obsessed with washing her hands?
Out I say!” In Macbeth’s fifth act, Lady Macbeth’s role in the treacherous murder of Duncan takes its toll, and she begins obsessively washing her hands to alleviate her guilty conscience.
Why is it easier for Lady Macbeth to wash away the blood from her hands than it is for Macbeth What does blood signify to them?
The blood on their hands signifies that no matter what the murder of the king will stick with them forever. Lady Macbeth is able to was the blood away easier because unlike Macbeth who was hesitant to kill the king she was serious about killing him. is her for Macbeth?
What does Lady Macbeth mean when she tells Macbeth My hands are of your color but I shame to wear a heart so white?
Lady Macbeth says the quote “My hands are of your color, but I shame to wear a heart so white” to her husband Macbeth. The quote by Lady Macbeth means that she is just as guilty of Duncan’s murder but, unlike Macbeth, she feels no remorse for the murder and shames Macbeth as a coward for feeling so.
What does Lady Macbeth say to reassure Macbeth?
How does Lady Macbeth reassure Macbeth after he has killed Duncan? Find two quotations to support your point. She reassures him by telling him to just wash his hands with little water and act like if nothing happened. -“A little water clears us of this deed.
What are Lady Macbeth quotes?
Lady Macbeth quotes
- “Come you spirits, That tend on mortal thoughts, unsex me here.”
- “And when goes hence?”
- “Look like th’innocent flower, But be the serpent under’t”
- “What beast was’t then, That made you break this enterprise to me?”
- “Tis the eye of childhood, That fears a painted devil.”
- “What’s to be done?”
What is symbolic about what each of them says about hand washing Macbeth?
The blood on Macbeth’s hands symbolizes the guilt he feels for murdering Duncan. Lady Macbeth speaks these words at the end of the play, wandering around the castle in a delirium trying to wash out an invisible bloodstain, a symbol of her guilt.
Why does she rub her hand and say out out damned spot?
She is washing (usually presumed to be) imaginary/remembered blood off of her hands, expressing her guilt for killing Duncan.
What does Lady Macbeth do with her hands while sleepwalking?
Carrying a taper (candlestick), Lady Macbeth enters sleepwalking. Lady Macbeth rubs her hands in a washing motion. With anguish, she recalls the deaths of King Duncan, Lady Macduff, and Banquo, then leaves. The Gentlewoman and the bewildered Doctor exeunt, realizing these are the symptoms of a guilt-ridden mind.
What does Lady Macbeth say stopped her from killing Duncan?
In Scene 2, what does Lady McBeth say stopped her from killing Duncan? The king reminded her of her father. feels distressed about his actions. Whom does the porter pretend to let into “hell” at the beginning of Scene 3?