She rings the bell three times. xx
Lady Macbeth rang the bell three times to give Macbeth a signal that Duncan's servant are asleep and the time is right for Macbeth to enter Duncan's chamber
NO! Lady Macbeth does not kill king Duncan's Guard Macbeth does to prove his guilt.
Macbeth, yet guards were framed and Lady Macbeth was the plotter!
No it is Lady Macbeth that smears the guards with blood because Macbeth does not want to go back, so she goes and does it instead.
No one bribed the two royal guards in the Shakespearean play 'Macbeth'. Instead, Lady Macbeth [b. c. 1015] gave them drugged drinks. The guards passed out from their drinking and drugging. They couldn't save their sovereign, King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040], or themselves from being stabbed to death.
Lady Macbeth rang the bell three times to give Macbeth a signal that Duncan's servant are asleep and the time is right for Macbeth to enter Duncan's chamber
Lady Macbeth
NO! Lady Macbeth does not kill king Duncan's Guard Macbeth does to prove his guilt.
Lady Macbeth enters the King's room to plant the daggers on the guards after she has drugged them. This is part of the plan she and Macbeth devised to frame the guards for the murder of King Duncan.
Lady Macbeth is startled by the sound of a scream, which she interprets as a signal that the murder has taken place. This startles her because it signifies that the plan she orchestrated with Macbeth has been set in motion and there is no turning back.
Macbeth, yet guards were framed and Lady Macbeth was the plotter!
Lady Macbeth signaled to her husband, Macbeth, that it was time to kill the king by ringing a bell to signal him to go to Duncan's chamber. She also drugged the guards so they were unconscious, making it easier for Macbeth to carry out the murder.
Lady Macbeth plans to intoxicate the chamber guards with wine so that they are unable to stay awake or alert, allowing Macbeth to carry out the murder of King Duncan without being caught.
Lady Macbeth gives a signal to Macbeth to come and do the murder by ringing a bell. "The bell invites me", he says.
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth are worried that the daggers used to kill King Duncan will incriminate them as the killers. Lady Macbeth is particularly anxious about the potential consequences of the discovery of the daggers.
Lady Macbeth drugs the guards stationed outside King Duncan's chamber to ensure they are unconscious and unable to interfere with her plan to frame them for Duncan's murder. This allows Macbeth to easily access Duncan's chamber and carry out the assassination.
Yes, Lady Macbeth was Macbeth's accomplice in the murder of King Duncan. She encouraged and manipulated Macbeth to carry out the murder of Duncan to fulfill the prophecy that he would become king.