arabera Greg Clinton 5 years ago
297
Check out the "making of Macbeth blood" for the National Theater in England -- they actually talk about how they want it thicker, so it drips down the walls in a particular way...
As Lady Macbeth prepares her plan to kill King Duncan, she asks the spirits of murder to "make thick my blood; / Stop up the access and passage to remorse" (1.5.43-44). In Shakespeare's time, people thought that poison made blood thick -- if you had thin blood, you were wholesome and good. Lady Macbeth doesn't want to feel guilty about the murder, so she is essentially giving her soul to the demons to be poisoned.
Examples of Irony in Shakespeare
Examples of Irony in literature