Macbeth is accused of treason and regicide by Macduff. Macduff confronts Macbeth for killing King Duncan, breaking the divine right of kings, and usurping the throne.
MacBeth mistakenly took his dagger with him after killing the king. Lady MacBeth then proceeds to take them back when MacBeth will not. She also smears blood on the chamberlains who are drunk. MacBeth then goes to wash his hands and he can't seem to wash the blood off.
A) So that they will not be able to tell people that Macbeth killed the King, and B) so that he can frame them for killing the King, allowing him to escape suspicion.
Two foreign kings attack Scottish kings. At the beginning of the play the King of Norway has sided with the Scottish rebels MacDonald and Cawdor against King Duncan. At the end the King of England, Edward the Confessor, has sided with Malcolm, McDuff, Ross and others against King Macbeth.
A big effect
That the witches' prophecy of Banquo as the ancestor of a long line of kings is fulfilled despite his murder is the reason that the kings appear in Act 4 Scene 1 of the play "Macbeth."Specifically, the kings are conjured up by the witches when Macbeth (d. August 15, 1057) comes to visit in Act 4 Scene 1. In Act 1 Scene 3, the witches predict that Macbeth will become king and that his best friend Banquo will be the ancestor to kings though not a king himself. In Act 3 Scene 3, Macbeth arranges to have Banquo killed. Act 4 Scene 1 shows that Macbeth find success in killing Banquo, but not in stopping Banquo's royal line.
Macbeth: all hail Macbeth! hail to thee, thane of Glamis all hail Macbeth, hail to thee, thane of Cawdor all hail Macbeth, that shalt be king hereafter Banquo: hail hail hail lesser than Macbeth, and greater not so happy, yet much happier thou shall get kings, though thou be none
The Queen Killing Kings was created in 2006.
The line of kings shown to Macbeth in his vision are intended to imply that Banquo's descendants will not only be kings but will be kings for ever. Naturally this was a polite flattery to King James, who was supposedly one of them. Anyway, Macbeth gets the point, although why it should distress him as much as it does is puzzling.
Macduff
angus is one of the kings thanes
Drugged them.