Malcolm invites everyone to the coronation.
Macbeth concludes with Macbeth being beheaded and Malcom being proclaimed king. Richard III concludes with Richard dying on the battlefield and Richmond being proclaimed king. Richard II concludes with Richard being murdered in a jail cell and his successor taking a vow to make a pilgrimage. Hamlet concludes with the entire Danish royal family dying and Fortinbras beign proclaimed king. Titus Andronicus concludes with Titus and practically everyone else dying and his brother Marcus taking over. King Lear concludes with Lear and his daughters dying and Albany, Kent and Edgar resolving to take over the kingdom. On the other hand, A Midsummer Night's Dream concludes with a play being performed at a triple wedding. As You Like It concludes with four couples getting married. The Taming of the Shrew concludes with Lucentio's and Hortensio's wedding and Kate proving that she is the most obedient wife there. Love's Labour's Lost concludes with the four couples not getting married because the King of France died (They have to wait a year.) Twelfth Night concludes with three couples getting married. You get the idea.
He sees a dagger floating in the air in front of him. He concludes that it must be a "dagger of the mind", a hallucination.
Well, it has an ending, for sure. Macbeth is dead, his head chopped off. Lady Macbeth is dead too. A new reign is about to begin. It is the end of the story of Macbeth. But that doesn't mean there is no sequel. Had the play been popular (it wasn't), we might have seen "Macbeth II: Donalbain's Revenge". Shakespeare actually wrote a whole series of plays which were all sequels or prequels to one of his first plays about the reign of Henry VI. But each one of these ends on some kind of closing event, even though the story goes on.
And then Macbeth asked Macbeth if he confronted Macbeth on killing Macbeth with Macbeth.
Yes, Banquo suspects Macbeth in Act 3 Scene 1. He meets with Macbeth in a room of the royal palace at Forres. It's after Macbeth's coronation at Scone. Banquo comments on the truth of the three witches' three predictions for Macbeth: the thaneship of Glamis and Cawdor, and the kingship of Scotland. He concludes, '...and I fear/Thou played'st most foully for 't' [Lines 2-3].
Macbeth and Lady Macbeth.
How does lady macbeth cover for macbeth at the banquet?
The first apparition warned Macbeth, 'Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth: beware Macduff, Beware the Thane of Fife. Dismiss me. Enough'
The witches never said "Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth". In Act 4, Scene 1, both the First Apparition and the Second Apparition begin their prophecies by calling out, "Macbeth! Macbeth! Macbeth!" Macbeth responds to the First Apparition by thanking it for warning him against the Thane of Fife (Macduff). Macbeth responds to the Second Apparition with: "Had I three ears, I'd hear thee."
Lady Macbeth is the wife of the title character, Macbeth, a Scottish nobleman.
she is the assistant of lady macbeth(macbeth's wife)
Lady Macbeth clearly contrasts with Macbeth.