"Stones have been known to move"
Imagery
Act 3,
Scene 4
Lines 125-129
Macbeth
The imagery in these lines makes historical reference to the superstitious belief that the tombstones of murdered victims would move, and that trees could speak of murders they had witnessed, and that those with supernatural abilities could use their tools, or “understood relations,” (such as interpreting the entrails of sacrificed birds, like magpies or crows) to identify murderers.