who in Macbeth said 'the sleeping and the dead are but as pictures'
Macduff discovers King Duncan dead in Macbeth.
In the play Macbeth the line "The queen, my lord, is dead" is delivered by the character of Seyton, who is Macbeth's personal manservant.
Through a servant who announces it to Macbeth. "My lord, the queen is dead."
it was Macbeth to lady Macbeth
it means that she wishes I was dead
whar were three wishes Einstein expressed about his dead?
"This dead butcher and his fiendlike queen" Nice, eh.
The Prophecy says Macbeth will be king. Duncan is king. Macbeth cannot be king while Duncan is king. Duncan will not be king when he is dead. Therefore, make Duncan dead.
Macbeth is the first person to see King Duncan dead after he murders him in his sleep. Lady Macbeth later discovers the body as well.
"The sleeping and the dead are but as pictures" implies that they cannot fight back. Macbeth refuses to go back to the room where the murdered Duncan lies, and Lady Macbeth is telling him in her usual contemptuous way that he has nothing to be afraid of.
Her agent. She's fed up with her role at this point, and can't believe she has to die offstage. Her agent's name was Seyton.