No, Macbeth is the one who sees daggers before him as an illusion. Macbeth is the first one to go crazy and lose it. He sees the daggers because hes worrying about killing King Duncan. (:
False, Lady Macbeth goes to return the daggers.
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth plan to blame the murder of King Duncan on his chamberlains by framing them with the daggers used in the assassination.
Macbeth kills the grooms so they cannot tell the others the truth.
The daggers used to commit the murder belong to the character Macbeth in Shakespeare's play "Macbeth." After Lady Macbeth manipulates him into committing regicide, Macbeth uses the daggers to kill King Duncan. The act signifies his descent into guilt and madness, as he later regrets his actions and is haunted by the consequences.
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.
Both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth worry about it. She says, "Why did you bring the daggers from the place?" when Macbeth fails to leave them there. She wants them left to incriminate the guards. But Macbeth worries that they may not incriminate the guards enough, so he kills them.
He wants them to pass out so he can steal their daggers, sneak by them and kill Duncan. Then he will smear them with blood and lay the daggers near them, and they will be so drunk they will still be asleep.
The Macbeths' plan was to blame Duncan's bodyguards for the murder of Duncan. To this end Lady M. smeared their faces with blood and they stole the bodyguards' daggers to commit the murder. But Macbeth was worried that when they woke up and denied having anything to do with the murder (They could reasonably point out that they had been too drunk to do anything) people might believe them. Therefore he made sure they had no chance to deny the murder.
They knock out the king's bodyguards with a Mickey Finn and and frame them for the crime and then execute them before they have a chance to defend themselves. Later, Macbeth suggests that they were in the pay of the King's sons who had the best motive for the crime.
After the murder of King Duncan it was planned that Macbeth would place the bloody daggers next to the drugged soldiers that were supposed to be keeping watch over King Duncan. This was to be done in order to make the people of Scotland believe that the soldiers had executed the murder.
When Macbeth doesn't kill Duncan, lady Macbeth decides to insult and question his manhood. Her beliefs are that manhood can only be defined through murder. And in a way Lady Macbeth 'dares' Macbeth to kill Duncan. Macbeth encouraged by his wife's determination and the chance to prove his manhood agrees to continue with the murder.
She encourages it.