a captain
In scene 3 of Macbeth, the Porter/doorman is drunk. They have been up drinking until three in the morning.
Macbeth's encounter with Macduff in the last scene has plenty of suspense. At first you don't know whether Macbeth will agree to fight with Macduff after all, but after he realizes he has no choice, you still aren't sure which one of them will win, as their battle continues offstage. Only when Macduff comes on with Macbeth's severed head is the suspense fully resolved.
Act 2, Scene 1: He begins hallucinating and thinks he sees a dagger pointing to Duncan's room. In the Banquet Scene, Act 3 Scene 4, after seeing the ghost of Banquo.
Macbeth is Duncan's cousin, as in the play duncun say's "o worthiest cousin" to Macbeth in act 1 scene four
Macbeth says hardly anything, and what he says he says without flowery poetry. Lady Macbeth is excited, enthusiastic, and poetic. Moreover, she is the one in charge. "You shall put this night's great business into my dispatch" she tells him. She is the one who has planned and intends to carry out the murder; Macbeth has evinced no such intent.
Duncan.
a
In Act III Scene 6 Lennox and another Lord discuss their deep suspicions that Macbeth is responsible for the murders of Banquo and Duncan. I hope that is the Scene 6 you had in mind; there is one in Act I and another in Act V. In the one in Act 5, Malcolm's army gets rid of its camouflage.
In Scotland. There is only one scene in England.
he is gay
The ghost of Banquo appears to Macbeth one time during the banquet scene in Shakespeare's play "Macbeth."
The phrase "Fair is foul, and foul is fair" sets the tone for scene one in Macbeth. This line suggests that things are not what they seem and foreshadows the theme of deception and moral ambiguity that will be prevalent throughout the play.
The jester Seyton informed MacBeth of his wife's suicide after they heard her scream.
In scene 3 of Macbeth, the Porter/doorman is drunk. They have been up drinking until three in the morning.
In this section, Macduff kills Macbeth in a duel. Macduff reveals that he was born through a Caesarian section, fulfilling the witches' prophecy that Macbeth would only be killed by one not born of woman. Macduff proclaims Malcolm as the rightful king of Scotland.
Macbeth's encounter with Macduff in the last scene has plenty of suspense. At first you don't know whether Macbeth will agree to fight with Macduff after all, but after he realizes he has no choice, you still aren't sure which one of them will win, as their battle continues offstage. Only when Macduff comes on with Macbeth's severed head is the suspense fully resolved.
One example of violence in Macbeth is Macbeth's murder of King Duncan in Act 2, Scene 2. Macbeth's ambitious desire to become king drives him to commit this heinous act, illustrating the destructive consequences of unchecked ambition and the violence that can arise from it.