They are not given in the script.
Lady Macbeth made the plan. The grooms who were to be guarding the king were to be made so drunk that they would not wake. Macbeth was to go into Duncan's rooms, steal the guards' daggers, kill Duncan with them, wipe the blood on the grooms so they would look guilty and leave the daggers there, and return to Lady Macbeth after which they were to return to bed.
it means the drink which intoxicated the chamberlains gave lady Macbeth the strength the cover their faces and beds with duncan's blood
Lady Macbeth gave the two royal guards drugged drinks. The two passed out, and were remiss in their responsibilities as defenders and protectors of their King, Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040]. Her husband then was able to kill the defenseless guards just as easily as he had killed his sovereign. It looked to those who found the three bloodied corpses that the guards had gotten drunk and gone crazy against their King and each other.
Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] and his Lady [b. c. 1015] planned to blame the two royal guards for the untimely death of King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040] of Scotland. Lady Macbeth was supposed to serve the guards drugged drinks, to keep them from protecting their sovereign. Macbeth was supposed to kill the sleeping, unarmed King and then the passed out, defenseless guards. The bloodied murder weapons were supposed to be left at the crime scene with the bloodied corpses. The crime scene was supposed to tell a tale of a king killed by his drunken guards and avenged by his outraged host. And that was what happened and how the royal guest chamber was made to look, in Act 2 Scene 2 of the Shakespearean play.
Macbeth was present.
After everyone found out Duncan was dead, Macbeth claimed that it was the guards who had slain King Duncan, as he made sure to smear the blood on their drunk, passed-out bodies.
Lady Macbeth made the plan. The grooms who were to be guarding the king were to be made so drunk that they would not wake. Macbeth was to go into Duncan's rooms, steal the guards' daggers, kill Duncan with them, wipe the blood on the grooms so they would look guilty and leave the daggers there, and return to Lady Macbeth after which they were to return to bed.
it means the drink which intoxicated the chamberlains gave lady Macbeth the strength the cover their faces and beds with duncan's blood
Lady Macbeth gave the two royal guards drugged drinks. The two passed out, and were remiss in their responsibilities as defenders and protectors of their King, Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040]. Her husband then was able to kill the defenseless guards just as easily as he had killed his sovereign. It looked to those who found the three bloodied corpses that the guards had gotten drunk and gone crazy against their King and each other.
mouth guards are made of rubber
Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] and his Lady [b. c. 1015] planned to blame the two royal guards for the untimely death of King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040] of Scotland. Lady Macbeth was supposed to serve the guards drugged drinks, to keep them from protecting their sovereign. Macbeth was supposed to kill the sleeping, unarmed King and then the passed out, defenseless guards. The bloodied murder weapons were supposed to be left at the crime scene with the bloodied corpses. The crime scene was supposed to tell a tale of a king killed by his drunken guards and avenged by his outraged host. And that was what happened and how the royal guest chamber was made to look, in Act 2 Scene 2 of the Shakespearean play.
The first apparition warned Macbeth, 'Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth: beware Macduff, Beware the Thane of Fife. Dismiss me. Enough'
Macbeth was present.
In the Shakespearean play, Macbeth killed King Duncan I. His sovereign was his main, intended victim. But he also killed the King's two royal chamberlains whose job it was to serve as guards. Macbeth likewise stabbed them to death. His Lady previously had given both chamberlains drugged drinks. The chamberlains therefore had passed out, and couldn't do their expected job of defending and protecting their sovereign. Neither could they serve as witnesses against the Macbeths. Additionally, Macbeth framed them for the murder of the King.But my thoughts and questions are....did Macbeth kill the guards at the time he killed Duncan or did he wait till he and Macduff entered and discovered the dead Duncan. My reasoning is the conversation Macbeth has with Lady Macbeth right after the deed. I think she is speaking of Malcolm and Donalbain sleeping in the room next to Duncan, but I think Macbeth may actually be talking about the two guards.
Macbeth clearly regrets what he has done. He speaks about washing the blodd of his hands. Lady Macbeth wants to cover up the death of the king by putting blood and the daggers on the night guards.
Macbeth used poison to kill King Duncan in the play "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare. He puts poison in the guards' drinks to render them unconscious and then proceeds to stab King Duncan to death while he is asleep.
The first apparition warned Macbeth, 'Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth: beware Macduff, Beware the Thane of Fife. Dismiss me. Enough'