It might be so Shakespeare was a play and peom writer so it might has well be
Shakespeare's "Macbeth" is primarily based on historical accounts found in Raphael Holinshed's "Chronicles of England, Scotland, and Ireland," published in 1577. Holinshed's work recounts the story of Macbeth, a Scottish nobleman who becomes king through treachery and murder. Shakespeare also draws on themes of ambition, fate, and the supernatural, incorporating elements of prophecy and the influence of the Weird Sisters to enhance the dramatic narrative. The play reflects the political climate of Shakespeare's time, particularly the anxieties surrounding power and legitimacy.
The two most popular of Shakespeare's "Histories" are Henry V and Richard III. Henry V is an interesting study of heroism and leadership; Richard III is all about power politics, deception, scheming and murder. The tragedies Julius Caesar and Macbeth are also based on (very loosely in the case of Macbeth) real historical people.
Shakespeare also wrote sonnets and long narrative poems
Excellent information of this sort can be found on the websites Shakespeare-Online, Absolute Shakespeare, and Sparknotes. Palomar College also has an entire section dedicated to the works of Shakespeare where one can find excellent information about Macbeth.
Macbeth uses daggers to commit the murder of King Duncan in Shakespeare's play "Macbeth." He later also uses daggers to have Banquo killed.
Macbeth told that Fleance should also be assassinated along with his father.
Shakespeare wrote "Macbeth" in unrhymed iambic pentameter, also known as blank verse. This metrical pattern consists of lines with five pairs of alternating unstressed and stressed syllables.
Most of Shakespeare's poems are sonnets, but there are also long narrative poems written in couplets.
Midsummer Nights Dream by Shakespeare also, Macbeth by the same writer.
Both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are necessary for the play. Neither would have murdered Duncan without the other. Shakespeare also wanted to explore the effects on their relationship of the guilt they experience after the murder.
It is a Shakespeare play. ---- There is strong - nearly conclusive - evidence that Shakespeare collaborated with Thomas Middleton in writing Macbeth. Perhaps Middleton collaborated with Shakespeare in writing the play, or perhaps he substantially revised it several years after it was first performed; but it seems certain that Middleton wrote the witches' songs, possibly the porter scene, and perhaps as much as 10% of the entire play. Macbeth is not the only play where we have evidence of Shakespeare sharing the authorship with another writer. Pericles and Henry VI.1 are two other plays where it is highly likely that not every scene is by Shakespeare. Collaborative authorship was not uncommon in the Elizabethan theatre - there are also plays by other dramatists where Shakespeare may have had a hand (Thomas More is one). And Middleton was very, very good: he seems to have taken over the role of chief playwright with the Kings Men (Shakespeare's company) when Bill retired. Middleton also seems to have done some work on Measure for Measure and Timon of Athens. But the bulk of these plays is Shakespeare's, so really they are Shakespearean plays.
Macbeth, of course, and also Henry VI Part II (Margery Jourdain is a witch)