Want this question answered?
Some unnatural events reported the night of Duncan's murder in Shakespeare's "Macbeth" include a violent storm with thunder and lightning disrupting the natural balance, horses eating each other, and the owl killing the falcon. These events symbolize the chaos and disruption in nature caused by the regicide.
She doesn't play any part in the murder of King Duncan.
Lady Macbeth gets them drunk, then frames them for the murder of Duncan.
Two Guards are smeared in blood and knocked out. When they are conious they exucuated!!!!
Avenge his murder
Macbeth, yet guards were framed and Lady Macbeth was the plotter!
Macbeth compares Duncan's murder to a bell signaling Duncan's eternal sleep. He expresses remorse and guilt over the treacherous act he has committed.
"Revenge my foul and most unnatural murder." That's about it.
He begins to seriously consider the possibility of committing murder to become king.
In the play "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare, King Duncan was murdered by Macbeth using a dagger.
That quote "foul and most unnatural" is not from Macbeth, but from Hamlet - Old Hamlet describes his own murder thus, when he is addressing his son as a ghost. The King is murdered in Macbeth, but this phrase is not used.
The king's servants who are blamed for King Duncan's murder are killed by Macbeth as part of his plan to frame them for the crime. Macbeth does this to shift suspicion away from himself and Lady Macbeth, who are the true perpetrators of the murder.