No. Not that she had enough time to do anything about it. By the time she gathered up her family and vamoosed, the murderers would have been there.
1) Macbeth taking his own fate into his own hands 2) Macbeth believing the withes' advice
she was able to persuade him to kill the king
Because the first one became true.
Banquo and Macbeth. And the other witches, of course.
Macbeth might advise Othello to be wary of ambition and its consequences, drawing from his own experience of the destructive nature of unchecked ambition. Othello could caution Macbeth about the dangers of jealousy and trusting the wrong people, given how his own jealousy led to tragic outcomes.
Sometimes, advice is not worth what you've paid for it. That's good advice. I'll accept your advice.
Anyone can give advice - however, it's not wise to accept advice from anyone but an expert.
"Hear his speech but say thou nought."
Macduff is the character who ultimately escapes death in Macbeth. He was not "of woman born" as foretold by the witches, and is able to defeat Macbeth in the final battle.
Macbeth's relationship with lady Macbeth was rather unique. they were like the old english bonnie and clyde. Lady Macbeth was able to talk Macbeth into killing in order for him to have higher power. in the end they both paid the price
to observe Lady Macbeth's unusual behavior. your welcome
6yyu