There are two murderers in act 3 scene 3 in Macbeth.
two forts
two forts
There are two. 'sur', then 'prise'.
The Montague servant's start the fight because Sampson bit his thumb at Abraham (Capulet servant) and it continued from there.
i have been sent two txt to claim my surprises cant get any answers
There is no concrete evidence in the play to suggest that the third murderer is Macbeth. The presence of the third murderer serves to show the extent of Macbeth's paranoia and how easily he manipulates others to do his bidding. It adds to the atmosphere of deceit and betrayal in the play.
they are poor
At the beginning of Scene 5 in Shakespeare's "Romeo and Juliet," the two men arguing are Sampson and Gregory, who are servants of the Capulet family. They engage in a verbal altercation with Abraham and Balthasar, servants of the Montague family, which escalates tensions between the two feuding families. This confrontation sets the stage for the ongoing conflict throughout the play.
There were numerous murderers in the X-files. However the two most well known were Cigerette smoking man and Alex Krychek.
well unlike the first two Elizabeth was not in the first scene.
Macbeth wants to do away with Banquo and his son. The Murderers succeed with Banquo, but not the son, ans Banquo's bloody ghost appears to Macbeth during the Lords' Banquet.