The night was pitch black, no moon was in sight; King Duncan's horses started eating each other; an owl killing a falcon. etc
Macbeth, yet guards were framed and Lady Macbeth was the plotter!
She doesn't play any part in the murder of King Duncan.
In the play "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare, King Duncan was murdered by Macbeth using a dagger.
The king's servants who are blamed for King Duncan's murder are killed by Macbeth as part of his plan to frame them for the crime. Macbeth does this to shift suspicion away from himself and Lady Macbeth, who are the true perpetrators of the murder.
He begins to seriously consider the possibility of committing murder to become king.
Lady Macbeth planned to blame the murder on the grooms of Duncan's chamber. This frame-up was successful, at least at first.
After Duncan's boy is discovered dead, Macbeth kills the King's guards out of rage and panic. Lady Macbeth tries to maintain control and cover up their involvement in the murder. Macbeth is eventually crowned King of Scotland.
She takes the daggers back to King Duncans chamber, wipes the blood from the daggers onto the Unconscious guards, and leaves the daggers beside them, so that when the body of the king was found it would seem that the guards where guilty of treason.
King Duncans weakness is his ability to trust, he is too trustworthy, and in the end it turns bad
The guards who serve King Duncan in William Shakespeare's play "Macbeth" are known as the thanes.
Macbeth sees a dagger floating in front of him just before he goes to murder King Duncan. This vision is a hallucination that represents his internal conflict and the evil thoughts that are consuming him.
In the play "Macbeth" by William Shakespeare, King Duncan's castle is located in Inverness, Scotland.