Macbeth and Lady Macbeth conceal and carry out their plan to kill King Duncan by manipulating people and events to ensure their culpability remains hidden. Lady Macbeth urges Macbeth to act, while Macbeth carefully orchestrates the murder and subsequent framing of others. They both rely on deceit, manipulation, and secrecy to achieve their goals.
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 does not reveal his plan to kill Banquo and Fleance (Banquo's son) to Lady Macbeth.
Lady Macbeth plans to intoxicate the chamber guards with wine so that they are unable to stay awake or alert, allowing Macbeth to carry out the murder of King Duncan without being caught.
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth plan to murder King Duncan by inviting him to their castle as guests, then waiting until he is asleep to kill him. They plan to frame the chamberlains for the murder by planting the murder weapons on them.
Lady Macbeth helped murder King Duncan by encouraging and manipulating her husband, Macbeth, to carry out the murder. She devised the plan, provided the logistics, and urged Macbeth to complete the deed. She also drugged the guards to ensure they would be unconscious during the deed.
She wants it to be a dark and misty night because she doesn't want anybody to see her crime and also because she doesn't want heaven or feelings of remorse make her change her mind about killing the king.
"We shall proceed no further in this business."
(Apex Learning) Lady Macbeth will make sure the guards are drugged, allowing Macbeth to sneak in and stab the king to death.
Lady Macbeth's plan is to manipulate her husband, Macbeth, into killing King Duncan so that he can take the throne. She encourages Macbeth to be ruthless and ambitious in order to achieve their goal of becoming king and queen. However, her plan ultimately leads to their downfall as they descend into guilt and madness.
Get the guards drunk and stab the king in his bed. It's not a complicated plan.
Of course she approved! It was HER plan, not his.
Lady Macbeth devises a plan to kill King Duncan, to speed up her husband's ascension to the throne. Lady Macbeth fears that her husband is "to full of the milk of human kindness" to kill the king. She will see to it that the king's guards become so inebriated that they pass out, cannot guard the king, and cannot recall the events of the night. She will use their daggers to kill the king and smear his blood on them. This, though, is not quite what happens, because the king reminds Lady Macbeth of her father.