

Suddenly, both are alarmed by a loud knocking at the castle door.

Haunted by what he has done, Macbeth is once more reprimanded by his wife, whose inner strength seems only to have been increased by the treacherous killing. Following an evening of revelry, Lady Macbeth drugs the guards of the king's bedchamber then, at a given signal, Macbeth, although filled with misgivings, ascends to the king's room and murders him while he sleeps. Once more, however, his wife prevails upon him. At first Macbeth is loth to commit a crime that he knows will invite judgment, if not on earth then in heaven. A perfect opportunity presents itself when King Duncan pays a royal visit to Macbeth's castle. Returning to his castle, Macbeth allows himself to be persuaded and directed by his ambitious wife, who realizes that regicide - the murder of the king - is the quickest way to achieve the destiny that her husband has been promised.

Although initially prepared to wait for Fate to take its course, Macbeth is stung by ambition and confusion when King Duncan nominates his son Malcolm as his heir. As part of the same prophecy, the Witches predict that future Scottish kings will be descended not from Macbeth but from his fellow army captain, Banquo. Already a successful soldier in the army of King Duncan, Macbeth is informed by Three Witches that he is to become king. Set in medieval Scotland and partly based on a true historical account, Macbeth charts the bloody rise to power and tragic downfall of the warrior Macbeth.
