where is zekes house
Macbeth :)
The witches predict that Macbeth should be wary of Macduff, as he is a potential threat. This comes true when Macduff leads an army to overthrow Macbeth. They also predict that Macbeth will not be defeated until Birnam Wood comes to Dunsinane. This comes true when Malcolm's army uses tree branches from Birnam Wood as camouflage to approach Macbeth's castle.
After the banquet where Banquo's ghost appears, he tells Lady Macbeth that he "will send" so he hasn't done it yet. The next time we see him, he is visiting the witches, and then Lennox brings word that Macduff is fled to England. Macbeth says "Time, thou anticipat'st my dread exploits." What this means is that Macduff got away before Macbeth could get to him. It would seem that Macbeth never does send for Macduff.
There is no indication of any closeness between them. Macduff is never much interested in socializing with Macbeth. We first see him when he arrives at Macbeth's castle to see Duncan. Note that it is the king he wants to see, not Macbeth. When Macbeth is named king, Macduff refuses to attend the coronation. He also refuses to come to Lady Macbeth's dinner party. It would appear that he never liked Macbeth much.
Ross comes to Macduff's castle to inform Macduff about the troubling news concerning King Duncan's murder. He seeks to gather support and discuss the political turmoil that has arisen in Scotland following the king's death. Ross’s visit highlights the growing unrest and the need for allies as Macbeth's rise to power begins to unfold.
It depends which act. There are five scene 2s in the play. The only one which has anyone coming to a castle is in Act 4 Scene 2 when some murderers come to Macduff's castle. Of course people come to castles all the time throughout the play.
This line is spoken by Macduff in William Shakespeare's play Macbeth. He is referring to Macbeth as a devil more evil than any in hell.
Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] increased his confidence in his ability to hold onto his job as King of Scotland. He felt more confident because of his decision to leave nothing living or breathing at Macduff's home in Fife. At the beginning of Act 4 Scene 1 of the Shakespearean play, Macbeth was worried about his job as King. But the witches assured him of success against men born of women. They also convinced him of success as long as Birnam Wood didn't move to Dunsinane Castle. They showed him Banquo's ghost following a long royal line. But they warned him, not of Banquo, but of Macduff. Macbeth wasn't given practical interpretations of the witches' warnings. Neither was he encouraged to think along practical lines. So he saw improbable warnings as being improbable events. The only probable warning was against Macduff, whom he thought that he could handle in lethal ways. Macbeth's first plan was the murder of Macduff. But Lennox told him of Macduff's flight into England. Macbeth therefore projected his murderous vision onto Macduff's entire family and household. The Fife Castle massacre would anger Macduff. But Macbeth believed that Macduff, as just another man born of woman, could be handled. What Macbeth didn't know was that Macduff hadn't been born of a living, breathing woman. In fact, he had been delivered, not born, by Caesarian section from a recently dead mother. Technically, he therefore he had come into the word from a corpse, not a woman.
At the end of the play Macduff gave Macbeth two choices; surrender and live under the rightful king of Scotland or die. Macbeth chose death.
In Shakespeare's Macbeth, the witches prophecy to Macbeth that he cannot be killed by any man born of a woman. Macbeth takes this to mean that he is safe from violence. It is later revealed to him that "Macduff was from his mother's womb untimely ripped," meaning that Macduff was not "born" in the strict sense.
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth's castle at Inverness. (It's in Scotland on Loch Ness)
The prophecy that Macbeth will be safe until Great Birnam Wood comes to Dunsinane Hill comes true when Macduff orders his men to cut down trees and branches from Birnam Wood in order to hide their numbers as they advance on Macbeth's castle on Dunainane Hill. Macbeth is alarmed, but convinced that he will be spared because of the prophecy that he cannot be killed by a "man of woman born." In the final battle, Macbeth is killed by Macduff, who was born with a caesarian section.