Scene 7 Inside the castle, as servants set a table for the evening’s dinner, Macbeth (by himself) ponders if he should assassinate Duncan. He thinks that it would be easy if he could be sure that it would not result in terrible consequences. He declares his willingness to risk eternal damnation. He then considers the reasons why he ought not to kill Duncan: Macbeth is Duncan’s kinsman, subject, and host; also, the king a righteous ruler. Macbeth realizes there is no reason to kill Duncan other than his own desire.
Lady Macbeth enters and tells her husband the king has finished eating, and that he has been asking for him. Macbeth tells her that he no longer wants to kill Duncan. Lady Macbeth gets mad and, tells her husband he is a coward and
Macbeth arrives at his castle before the king and tells his wife of what happened. She tells him to kill the king that night but Macbeth is reluctant. When the king arrives, he is welcomed and made comfortable. That night when he goes to sleep, Lady Macbeth beguiles the guards into getting drunk and Macbeth continues to question whether he should kill
They talk about King Duncan arriving and talk how to kill. He is staying over night so they talk how they are going to kill him and how he plans to leave tomorrow but will be dead by then. Lady Macbeth talks up Macbeth and tells him how to act so him seems more innocent. Then continues to boss him around and make him feel bad about himself and makes fun of his manhood. All her nagging payed off evenly cause Macbeth murders the king, but Macbeth was overwhelmed with the voices he heard and all the blood he didn't finish the job all the way
As Macbeth prepares to kill Duncan, he realizes that “this blow/Might be the be-all and the end-all here”(1.7.4-5), meaning this might be the end if he gets caught. Macbeth tells Lady Macbeth to “proceed no further in this business”(1.7.34), telling her to stop thinking about killing Duncan. Macbeth does not listen to his own advice and continues to think about murdering Duncan, which he achieves. After the murder of Duncan, Macbeth looks towards Lady Macbeth as he says,”This is a sorry sight”(2.2.28), truly acknowledging his actions and feeling guilty for them. As Macbeth lets the murder sink in, he realizes that the blood will never be “
Well what I had chose was that in act 2 there had been a scene where Macbeth had just killed King Duncan and he was heading back to lady Macbeth covered in blood. Macbeth and Lady Macbeth had a conversation about the event that just took place and had suggested that the fact was that he couldn't return the weapon it was covered in blood and he was feeling guilty about killing King Duncan. Macbeth had started imagining of hearing noises but when he had first came in he was imagining people in the castle that could be witnesses to killing King Duncan. And he had sworn that when he was killing King Duncan he had thought that someone had said “Sleep no more... Macbeth has murdered sleep”.
Macbeth brings the daggers to their room and lady Macbeth is upset that he has not followed the plan, and he risks people seeing it was him who committed
After hearing and believing what the witches had to say, Lady Macbeth tries to convince Macbeth to kill king Duncan. However at first, Lady Macbeth tries to make Macbeth the king by handling the situation herself. She says to her husband,”This night’s great business into my dispatch, Which shall to all our nights and days to come Give solely sovereign sway and masterdom” (1.5.. What Lady Macbeth is saying to her husband is that she will take of the plans regarding Duncan, and then says that after that night, Macbeth and Lady Macbeth will be as happy as
Lady Macbeth tells Macbeth that the plan to kill Duncan is that he must be sleeping in their home and that he has to leave the daggers with the
Macbeth struggles with whether he should kill the King or not, and I believe that killing the King is the worst thing that he could do. Macbeth even says, “that we but teach bloody instructions, which, being taught return, to plague the inventor” (1.7.11-13). The quote is basically saying that if Macbeth chooses to kill the King to gain power then others who are seeking power will do the same thing. Macbeth could gain power and control after the King’s death.
This scene takes place in Macbeth's castle, the morning after the murder of King Duncan. Lennox describes the eerie and unsettling feeling he had the previous night. People are saying they "heard i' th' air, strange screams of death, / and prophesying with accents terrible / of dire combustion and confused events" (30-32). Macduff goes to wake Duncan, finding him murdered in his sleep. Macduff is flustered and emotional, and yells to wake everyone in the castle.
Macbeth was a good and loyal warrior for king Duncan but after he heard the witches predictions, it changed the person inside him. This play is from one of the best writer of all time William Shakespeare. The play is “The Tragedy of Macbeth". It's a summary about how Macbeth became king in the eleventh century and after he took the throne.
Macbeth states to Lady Macbeth, “we will proceed no further in this business” (I, VII) since he almost finally decides to refuse to kill Duncan. However, Lady Macbeth uses different manipulative methodologies towards Macbeth and persuades him to consult the killing of Duncan. “So green and pale” (I, VII), Lady Macbeth even called him a coward. From the same scene, she mentions, “From this time, such I account thy love”, implying that if Macbeth cant stay steady concerning the murder of the king, then she will consider his love for her to be as similarly conflicting. Later in scene, Lady Macbeth states that if she had made such a promise as Macbeth did to her, she would “dash the brains out” of her own child as “it was smiling in her fail”.
Macbeth shows that he is willing to kill King Duncan because he is interested in the witches prophecy, after they tell him that he will become ‘Thane of Cawdor’ and then the King.
In act one scene 7, Macbeth doubts if he should kill the king; however, his wife, Lady Macbeth, manipulates him into proceeding. It might be difficult for Macbeth, the renowned warrior, to hear his wife accusing him of cowardice. Therefore, under Lady Macbeth’s influence, as she questions his manhood, he commences the murder in order to prove to her that he is not a “coward.” This is important to note because his soliloquy shows his determination to proceed.
King Duncan makes an appearance, and decides to stay at Macbeth's place for a night. But when it got to greeting the King, only Lady Macbeth was there. No sign of Macbeth. During the party, Macbeth’s Lady and Macbeth plan to poison King Duncan.
King Duncan then decided he would go to Macbeth 's house for dinner where Lady Macbeth had already been made aware of the situation with the witches and that Macbeth was not named king. When Macbeth arrives home she suggests they kill him, after he declines, she starts questioning his manhood and peer pressures him until he decides to kill Duncan. This act scarred the two sons of Duncan so they fled the country and Macbeth was crowned. Obviously the play ends with Macbeth as the villain, dethroned and beheaded.