In act two we learn that Macbeth had gone through with killing king duncan.I don't get the point of killing the king you should know that you'll be a suspect and he still has two sons that can take place.Even after killing him he is still a coward he wouldn't even go back to the scene of the crime.It's ladies Macbeth fault he he killed him she should of done it herself.The only reason she didn't was because he looked like her dad.Why did she want to kill him if he looked like her dad.
Then Macduff and lennox come to his castle because they had a meeting with him but find him dead.If they were the first to find him then how were the guards already dead ,and why would Macbeth say he killed him.It just makes it look like he already knew he was
The second murder that Macbeth has committed was also an essential component in the murder of Duncan. It consisted of Macbeth killing the 2 guards while approaching Duncan because one of them yelled “murder!” in his sleep which woke both of them up so Macbeth decides to kill them to cover his tracks. This action backfires on him because if he didn't kill the guards, he could've gotten away with it and many of the people in his kingdom including Macduff would've still had respect for him and not have suspicions about him which could've potentially changed the whole course of the story. The irony in this murder is that after he killed the guards, he lied about killing them by telling Macduff and Lennox that when he went to Duncan's room and found him dead, he became enraged by the sight of the guards, covered in blood and holding the daggers, and killed them to avenge Duncan's death but Macduff didn't buy his story, exhibits further signs
Macbeth is on trial for the murder of King Duncan this evidence is to prosecute him to get the justice that he so rightfully deserves. Macbeth was loyal to the king and he kills the king anyway by doing so he goes against everything that that he stands for. “The service and the loyalty i one in doing it pays itself your highness part is to receive our duties and our duties are to you the throne.(1.4.25-28) Macbeth is saying the loyalty to the throne and his services is all that he needs.
Macbeth ultimately comes to the decision to kill the king for the betterment of his future in the second act he goes through with it. In act 2 it is inferred that Macbeth has killed the king because he stated, “I have done the deed.” It is understood that he is talking about killing Duncan because he goes up to Lady Macbeth and says, “Didst thou not hear a noise?” She later explains that she didn’t hear a peep. By taking initiative and killing King Duncan, it just shows one way Macbeth decided to control his own future.
Persuasive draft Macbeth. A loyal, friendly and trustworthy soldier. How could he truly be responsible for the beloved King Duncan's death? He wouldn't have committed such a crime. But he did, persuaded by bribery of his beloved wife who was greedy of power.
In scene seven of act one, Lady Macbeth has to try and convince Macbeth to kill King Duncan. Lady Macbeth inquiries why change his mind now when he had already agreed to kill the King. Lady Macbeth even calls him cowardly for changing his mind upon something he’s agreed to already. Macbeth claims he can’t kill Duncan after Duncan has awarded him so greatly, and that he wouldn’t be a man if he killed Duncan. Lady Macbeth then replied with “What beast was’t, then, that made you break this enterprise to me?”
At first Macbeth thinks killing King Duncan is a dreadful thing to do:”We will proceed no further in this business./He hath honored me of late, and I have bought/Golden opinions from all sorts of people,/Which would be worn now in their newest gloss,/Not cast aside so soon”(1.7.31-35). This states that
He explains that the only reason for him to kill King Duncan would be that the murder would change his life because it makes him the king, and his ambition grows when he realizes this news. In both Macbeth and the present time,
First of all, Macbeth was very fearful of committing this murder. As said in the story, his wife, Lady Macbeth, was the mind that thought of this idea in order for her husband to become king after King Duncan was dead. After the killing King Duncan, Macbeth is scared of what might happen next and all the blood on
I believe that the risks of Macbeth killing the king overshadow the benefits. First, Macbeth should not kill King Duncan due to the fact that he is the King’s host. Killing someone who is in your company is seen as a cowardly act. Additionally, the King is one of Macbeth’s kinsmen, and Macbeth should protect him because of this fact not murder him. This is illustrated by this quote, “First, as I am his kinsman/…
Macbeth has nothing personal against the king, but he is in Macbeth’s way of being king. There’s no real reason for Duncan’s murder except his own. His ambition changes from a good person to a bad person, he murders the king just to take his place. Macbeth just wants the power, shows how his ambition is leading him to commit horrible crimes that will eventually lead to his downfall and death. The author also uses foreshadowing to show how overly ambitious Macbeth
What causes Macbeth to kill people? The tragedies that happen to Macbeth are results of his fatal flaw, ambition. I will prove that ambition is Macbeth’s downfall by describing each of the murder scenes Macbeth was involved in which displays the evolution of Macbeth’s power-driven attitude. This attitude is what ultimately gets him killed. “Whiles I stood rapt in the wonder if it came missives from the king, who all-hailed me, ‘Thane of Cawdor’, by which title, before, these weird sisters saluted me and referred me to the coming on of time with ‘Hail, king that shalt be.’”
Although killing is illegal, Macbeth sees no harm at all to killing King Duncan because he said that his son will be next in line for king. In Act 2 Scene 1 lines 64 and 65 Macbeth states, “Hear it not, Duncan, for it is a knell that summons thee to heaven or to hell”. This showing that in his pursuit of power Macbeth will kill anyone and does not care where they end up, as long as they are dead. His ambition to be king is so high that while in this pursuit of power he will do whatever it takes to get to the top. But this comes back to haunt him when he realizes that King Duncan actually was a great king and that many would miss him, so maybe just maybe he shouldn’t have killed him.
In this paragraph I will give three supporting reasons from the play to back up my reasoning. In Act 1 Scene 3 lines 129 to 144, Macbeth conversates to himself about the witches prophecies and how two of them have came true so he thinks to himself that maybe he may become king. He then has thoughts about killing the king. I use this quote because
Ladies and Gentlemen of the court, the evidence shows that Lady Macbeth compelled Macbeth to murder King Duncan and set him down a path of crime and destruction. She is as much to blame as Macbeth. The facts of the case are, Macbeth killed Duncan by his own hand, but he hired assassins to commit the murders of Banquo and Fleance. At the beginning of Lady Macbeth and Macbeth’s marriage the people can see they act as equals, one does not outrank the other. As time progresses her true colors start to seep through onto the surface. Lady Macbeth portrayed herself as power-hungry, she will do anything and everything to deem the family name as dominant and successful.
Macbeth tells a story of deceit, betrayal, and a man who, once pushed, would stop at nothing to get what he desired and keep it that way. The murder of King Duncan was not simply just because of Macbeth, as most people would usually believe since he was the one that went ahead with stabbing him. The blame should rightly fall on both Lady Macbeth and the Witches. There are multiple facts to support this statement.