someone in the castle. if i recall well, a messenger/servant.
Lady macbeth was afraid that people will find out that she was the one who told macbeth to kill king duncan. later, she got guilty, and suicided.
Before Macbeth killed Duncan he and Lady Macbeth were working together to aquire power. After Macbeth killed Duncan he went on to murder others without telling his wife. By the end of the play Macbeth does not care much about his wife as shown when he is told his wife is dead.
Lady Macbeth helped her husband carry out the assassination of their sovereign, King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040]. She did so by helping in the planning and in the framing of the two royal guards. She was the one who suggested her giving the guards too much of drugged drinks. She was the one who kept Macbeth on track when he wavered. She was the one who told Macbeth that the murder would best be done with the King vulnerable, helpless and defenseless from having dined and gotten ready for bed. She was the one who planted the daggers back on the bodies of the guards, to frame them for the royal killing.
There's no right answer. You have to decide for yourself who was responsible, which is what is so great about literature. There's either Lady Macbeth, the witches, or Macbeth himself. I believe Lady Macbeth was first to blame for her manipulation on Macbeth, then Macbeth because he chose to do the things he did under Lady Macbeth's word. The witches meerly told him what was going to happen in Macbeth's life.
Not at all. In fact, her could have cared less. This was also the time in the play when the fortunes that the apparitions told him were beginning to come true, first with Birnam wood moving to Dunsinane. He had more pressing issues to attend to than the death of a woman that he didn't care for at all
He told her about the three prophecies that he has been told by the witches. Thane of Cawdor, Thane of Glamis, and King of Scotland.
It's best expressed by the quotation, "I would not have such a heart in my bosom for thedignity of the whole body." The gentlewoman pities Lady Macbeth, but she is also afraid, not of Lady Macbeth, but of what might happen if she told anyone what Lady Macbeth has said.
Macbeth killed King Duncan and the two royal chamberlains. He then advised his wife of the murders. He was unhinged by the bloodiness of the killings, and by his inability to say 'Amen' to the prayers of the dying chamberlains.
Ross, he told them in England. Just before they go to war against Scotland and Macbeth
The three witches in the beginning of the play told Macbeth that he will be King. And his own ambition pretty much lead him to kill Duncan. *Lady Macbeth also has an influence in the murder of Duncan*
The change in their relationship is most apparent in Act III Scene 2. In the first Act, Lady M was Macbeth's "partner in greatness", to whom he told everything that the witches had said to him and to Banquo. They worked together, but she wore the pants. She is the one who overrides Macbeth's decision to "proceed no further with this business". She begins to see a change when, without consulting her, Macbeth decides to kill the grooms. By III, 2, when she asks him "What's to be done?" he replies "Be innocent of the knowledge, dearest chuck, till thou applaud the deed." He won't even tell her what he is planning any more. She is kept in ignorance and has no control over him.
Macbeth kills King Duncan because he is manipulated and influenced by the witches' prophecies, particularly the prediction that he will become king. While the witches' predictions play a role in triggering Macbeth's ambition, ultimately it is his own choices and actions that lead to Duncan's murder.