Lady Macbeth's plan is that Macbeth should do all the killing and she should do all the nagging and gloating. She gets Duncan's guards drunk, and puts their daggers in Duncan's room so Macbeth can sneak in, take the guards' daggers, stab Duncan, wipe the blood all over the guards and leave the knives in their hands, then come down and meet with her.
All does not go according to plan however, as Macbeth comes down after stabbing Duncan with the daggers in his hands. Lady M then tries to nag him into going back and doing the wiping and leaving the daggers there but he won't and she has to do it herself.
Macbeth does not reveal his plan to kill Banquo and Fleance (Banquo's son) to Lady Macbeth.
Get the guards drunk, stab the king, frame the guards.
Lady Macbeth knows that Macbeth is a good man, a worthy, noble, good soldier. But she feels that he is too full of the 'milk of human kindness' (i know its meant to be a good thing, but the is the most eviliest woman in English literature we are talking about) , when it comes to killing the king. She questions his manliness, saying she is more of a man than he is. This is how she manages to convince Macbeth to kill Duncan(the king).
Killed himself by stabbing himself repeatedly through the heart and then going out to where his servants were sleeping and wiping his blood all over them, perhaps? Or maybe their plan was to make it look like his servants had killed him.
The first plan for killing Hamlet which we know about is to send him to England to deliver orders to the English authorities that they should put Hamlet to death.
Macbeth does not reveal his plan to kill Banquo and Fleance (Banquo's son) to Lady Macbeth.
Get the guards drunk, stab the king, frame the guards.
She helps Macbeth out by tricking him into killing the king. :P
He is totally guilty. You might say that Lady Macbeth is guilty for conning him into it, or the witches are guilty for making the prophecy that starts the Macbeths thinking about becoming king and queen, but Macbeth must take responsibility in the end for going along with the murder plan, even if it made no sense, and he knew it made no sense, to do so.
Lady Macbeth's plan is to manipulate her husband, Macbeth, into killing King Duncan so that he can take the throne. She encourages Macbeth to be ruthless and ambitious in order to achieve their goal of becoming king and queen. However, her plan ultimately leads to their downfall as they descend into guilt and madness.
Lady Macbeth knows that Macbeth is a good man, a worthy, noble, good soldier. But she feels that he is too full of the 'milk of human kindness' (i know its meant to be a good thing, but the is the most eviliest woman in English literature we are talking about) , when it comes to killing the king. She questions his manliness, saying she is more of a man than he is. This is how she manages to convince Macbeth to kill Duncan(the king).
Lady Macbeth advised Macbeth to ignore his conscience and continue with their plan to kill King Duncan, even if he could not say amen after his prayers. She believed that their ambition was more important than moral guilt.
Of course she approved! It was HER plan, not his.
Lady Macbeth's reaction to Macbeth's confession that he had killed the grooms is one of shock and concern. She realizes that their plan to frame the grooms for King Duncan's murder has been disrupted and that their actions are beginning to spiral out of control. Lady Macbeth tries to maintain a sense of calm and composure while internally grappling with the consequences of their actions.
King Duncan was killed by Macbeth, who stabbed him to death while he was sleeping in his chambers in Macbeth's castle. This act was orchestrated by Lady Macbeth and was part of the plan to seize the throne.
Lady Macbeth [b. c. 1015] was more responsible than Macbeth [c. 1014-August 15, 1057] for the plot against their sovereign, King Duncan I [d. August 14, 1040] of Scotland. In Act 1 Scene 7, Macbeth said that he didn't want to go through with the murder. Lady Macbeth countered with a fail-safe plan of killing the King and his two royal guards with the latters' own daggers. She also suggested serving drugged drinks to the guards. The King's defenders thereby would be disabled, and stopped from protecting their sovereign and themselves from the Macbeths.
Get the guards drunk and stab the king in his bed. It's not a complicated plan.