I left out the following sentences on the same theme. Thank you.

1) If Duncan is bleeding, she will smear the grooms’ faces with blood and she goes to perform to task.
2) She will paint their faces with the golden blood.
3) Macbeth wonders whether all Neptune’s ocean can wash his hands clean. His hand is more likely to turn red the great gathering of seas making the green of the water red than being made clean by all the ocean.
4) Nothing can make his hands innocent. He will bring corruption to all he comes in contact with.
5) Lady Macbeth tells that her hands are also red and she is ashamed to have a coward’s heart.
6) She urges him to move so that he can appear as though he has just awakened. She also tells him not to be lost so badly in his thoughts. She believes his firmness of mind has deserted him and left him unattended.
7) Macbeth says that if he must know (admit) his deed, than it would be best for me to lose all knowledge of himself.

3) Here is a run-on sentence which you can fix with a semicolon. "red the" = red; the

7) not "than" but "then" and what is "me" doing in this sentence?

Sra

Certainly! Here are the remaining sentences on the same theme:

1) If Duncan is bleeding, she will smear the grooms’ faces with blood and she goes to perform the task.
2) She will paint their faces with the golden blood.
3) Macbeth wonders whether all Neptune’s ocean can wash his hands clean. His hand is more likely to turn red from the gathering of seas, making the green water red, than being made clean by all the ocean.
4) Nothing can make his hands innocent. He will bring corruption to all he comes in contact with.
5) Lady Macbeth tells him that her hands are also red and she is ashamed to have a coward’s heart.
6) She urges him to move so that he can appear as though he has just awakened. She also advises him not to be lost in his thoughts. She believes that his firmness of mind has deserted him and left him unattended.
7) Macbeth says that if he must admit his deed, then it would be best for him to lose all knowledge of himself.

1) In this sentence, it seems like Duncan is bleeding and Lady Macbeth plans to take advantage of that by smearing the grooms' faces with the blood.

2) Lady Macbeth further elaborates on her plan by stating that she will paint their faces with the golden blood. It appears that she wants to make it seem like they are the ones responsible for Duncan's murder.

3) Here, Macbeth contemplates the guilt he feels after committing the murder. He wonders if even the vastness of Neptune's ocean can wash away the stain from his hands. He believes that his hands, rather than becoming clean, would turn the entire ocean red with their guilt.

4) Macbeth acknowledges that nothing can make his hands innocent again. He believes that his actions have irreversibly corrupted him and will bring corruption to anyone he comes in contact with.

5) Lady Macbeth confesses that her hands are also stained red, representing her involvement in Duncan's murder. She feels ashamed to have a cowardly heart and regrets her actions.

6) Lady Macbeth urges Macbeth to change his demeanor and pretend as though he has just awakened. She advises him not to get lost in his troubling thoughts, as she believes his strength of mind has deserted him, leaving him vulnerable and unattended.

7) In this sentence, Macbeth suggests that if he were to confess his crime, it would be better for him to completely lose all self-awareness and knowledge of his own existence. This implies that he would rather be ignorant of his own guilt than admit to his deed.