The theme is do you never do for some one says Unless necessary One I found is do the right thing "I am, and can be, whatever I make of myself" This was a quote by Bruce Kirtland. Also you could discuss importance of family and trust. I didn't see many profound themes in this novel.
Duncan Hall died on 2011-01-18.
Clifton Duncan's birth name is Clifton Alphonzo Duncan.
Duncan LaVail's birth name is LaVail DeShaun Duncan.
Shelley Duncan's birth name is David Shelley Duncan.
His name is supposed to be capitalized, first of all. :) It doesn't really resemble anything, just the fact that that's where he was born in, and slept.
because king Duncan looked alot like lady Macbeth's father.
Macbeth
She didn't want to kill him herself, because she said Duncan looked like her dad while he slept. She did have Macbeth murder Duncan nonetheless
i dont have a kid nor did i sleep with anyone, and i was never pregnant.... dont say why YOUR kid looks like someone YOU slept with say I and why does MY kid look like the man I slept with when I was pregnant.....
father
Duncan's grooms, who he and Lady Macbeth have framed for the murder of Duncan. He claims to have been infuriated at their apparent guilt, when in fact he just wanted to shut them up.
"There's no art to find the mind's construction in the face. He was a gentleman on whom I built an absolute trust."
Duncan is a bit miffed with Cawdor because he was a traitor who joined forces with the king of Norway and assisted him in his invasion of Scotland. Naturally, Duncan ordered Cawdor to be executed, musing "he was a gentleman on whom I built and absolute trust."
Theseus was the son of Aethra (mother) and fathered by King Aegeus and Poseidon, both of whom Aethra slept with in one night.
Yes, slept is a verb. Take the sentence, She slept. What is your subject? She. What did she do? She slept. Slept is an action word. That is the action that she performed. She slept. It is a verb.
Macbeth claims that he killed the groomsmen out of fury and grief for the murder of King Duncan, whom he believes the groomsmen had conspired against. However, it is widely speculated that Macbeth actually killed them in order to prevent them from revealing his own guilt in the murder of Duncan.