The two (2) royal grooms are the individuals whom Lady Macbeth frames for the murder of King Duncan (d. August 14, 1040) in the play "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare (Baptzied April 26, 1564 - April 23, 1616).
Specifically, the killing of the king and of his guards takes place in Act II Scene II. Macbeth (d. August 15, 1057) expertly wields a knife against all three. The guards are sleeping, but he decides that he can frame them for a murder charge against which they will have no opportunity to defend themselves. That is exactly his wife's thought on the matter as well.
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Duncan's grooms, who he and Lady Macbeth have framed for the murder of Duncan. He claims to have been infuriated at their apparent guilt, when in fact he just wanted to shut them up.
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.
Macbeth
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Macbeth frames King Duncan's chamberlains for his murder by planting the bloody daggers on them while they are asleep. He does this to deflect suspicion away from himself and his wife, Lady Macbeth, who orchestrated the murder.
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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.
Macbeth claims that he killed the groomsmen out of fury and grief for the murder of King Duncan, whom he believes the groomsmen had conspired against. However, it is widely speculated that Macbeth actually killed them in order to prevent them from revealing his own guilt in the murder of Duncan.
Duncan's grooms, who he and Lady Macbeth have framed for the murder of Duncan. He claims to have been infuriated at their apparent guilt, when in fact he just wanted to shut them up.
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.
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
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In Shakespeare's play "Macbeth," the ghost that haunts Macbeth is the ghost of Banquo, a former friend whom Macbeth has murdered in order to secure his position as king. The ghost appears during a banquet hosted by Macbeth and is only visible to him, causing Macbeth to react with guilt and terror.
At the beginning of the play in act 1 the Thane of Cawdor (the earlier one, not Macbeth) is a traitor, and also a guy called Macdonweald whom Macbeth defeats.
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