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Macbeth brings the bloody daggers back to their bedroom to frame the sleeping guards for King Duncan's murder. He wants to shift the blame away from himself and convince others that the guards were the ones responsible for the crime.
Lady Macbeth returns the bloody daggers (two of them) to the grooms in Duncan's chamber. Macbeth cannot face doing it.
Macbeth brings back King Duncan's bloody daggers to the castle after he murders him.
In Shakespeare's "Macbeth," Macbeth fears that the bloody daggers will reveal his guilt in the murder of King Duncan. He worries that the evidence of his crime will expose him, leading to his downfall. To conceal his involvement, he ultimately decides to leave the daggers with the guards, which he believes will shift the blame away from him. This act of desperation highlights his growing paranoia and ambition as he seeks to secure his power.
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.
Where is Macbeth going when he sees the bloody dagger?
Lady Macbeth influences Macbeth to commit regicide by questioning his masculinity and manipulating his ambition. She urges him to fulfill the witches' prophecy and take action to seize power, driving him to murder King Duncan. Her relentless ambition and cunning manipulation ultimately lead to their downfall.
Macbeth frames the guards for Duncan's murder by placing the bloody daggers in their hands while they were asleep, so that it would appear as if they were the ones who committed the crime. This was part of his plan to shift the blame away from himself and solidify his claim to the throne.
Macbeth frames King Duncan's chamberlains for his murder by planting the bloody daggers on them while they are asleep. He does this to deflect suspicion away from himself and his wife, Lady Macbeth, who orchestrated the murder.
After the murder of King Duncan it was planned that Macbeth would place the bloody daggers next to the drugged soldiers that were supposed to be keeping watch over King Duncan. This was to be done in order to make the people of Scotland believe that the soldiers had executed the murder.
The Macbeths' plan was to blame Duncan's bodyguards for the murder of Duncan. To this end Lady M. smeared their faces with blood and they stole the bodyguards' daggers to commit the murder. But Macbeth was worried that when they woke up and denied having anything to do with the murder (They could reasonably point out that they had been too drunk to do anything) people might believe them. Therefore he made sure they had no chance to deny the murder.