In the Shakespearean play, Macbeth [d. August 15, 1057] interviewed two murderers about the killing of Banquo and Fleance. He wanted the murder done away from his palace at Forres. The two murderers met up with a third that Macbeth apparently had hired separately. The three waited in the park near the palace at Forres. In that park, they succeeded in killing Banquo. But Banquo's son Fleance managed to escape.
At a park near the palace
Fleance manages to escape, while his father Banquo is murdered.
Without Fleance escaping there is noone to tell the story of Banquo
Macbeth only hired 2 murderers to attack Banquo and his son, but there ended up being 3 murderers.
The murderers fail to kill Fleance.
The first murderer said, 'Most Royal Sir,/Fleance is 'scaped'. In Act 3 Scene 4, he appeared at the post-coronation banquet that Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] was holding at the royal palace at Forres. He informed Macbeth of the throat-slitting end of Banquo in the forest near the palace. Then he had to inform Macbeth of the failed attempt to do likewise to Banquo's son, Fleance.
Banquo and his son, Fleance, go horseback riding on the castle grounds together. This is where there are accosted by the murders. The murders kill Banquo, but Fleance gets away.
When the murderers kill Banquo, Fleance (Banquo's son) flees. And the murderers only kill Banquo not Fleance however Macbeth told the murderers to kill both the father and the son.
Macbeth sets an ambush for Banquo with three murderers. The murderers kill Banquo but Banquo's son Fleance escapes.
Macbeth's plan was to murder fleance and banquo but it was not accomplished fully because fleance was able 2 escape
He "scaped"; he got away from the murderers. They were concentrating on Banquo and Fleance made a break for it.
Fleance is Banquo's son who flees the three murderers when his father is killed.
In William Shakespeare's play Macbeth, Fleance escapes the murderers sent by Macbeth to kill him at the same time as his father, Banquo. Fleance's escape allows him to fulfill the witches' prophecy that Banquo's descendants will inherit the throne.
Macbeth was talking to the murderers he hired to kill Banquo when he said, "Worms that fled." He was expressing his anger and frustration that Banquo's murderers only killed Banquo and let his son, Fleance, escape.
In Act Three of The Tragedy of Macbeth, Macbeth hires murderers to kill Banquo and his son, Fleance. The murderers successfully kill Banquo, but Fleance manages to escape, leaving Macbeth's desire to secure the throne unfulfilled.
In Shakespeare's play "Macbeth," the murderers hired by Macbeth kill Banquo, but Fleance manages to escape. This event is pivotal in the play, as Banquo's murder triggers Macbeth's descent into paranoia and further moral decline. Fleance's survival ensures the fulfillment of the witches' prophecy that Banquo's descendants will inherit the throne.
Banquo is on his way to a royal banquet when he is attacked by the murderers sent by Macbeth. The murderers ambush him and kill him, but his son Fleance manages to escape.
The murderers sent to kill Banquo succeed in killing him, but fail to kill his son, Fleance. Fleance escapes, which means that the witches' prophecy, that Banquo would be the father of kings, will come true.