It is said that
ambition is the key to success. In the
case of Shakespeare's Macbeth, it is the
key to his
downfall. He is presented with the
ambition by the supernatural power of the witches.
Lady Macbeth, his
wife, then pushes the ambition. After
the murdering of Duncan, Macbeth has
gained enough
ambition himself to cause his own destruction.
We can see a clear building of
desire throughout
the play.
Macbeth is first
introduced to the limits of his power and his ambitions by the witches, who
greet him with
three titles: Thane of Glamis, which Macbeth is fully aware of; Thane of Cawdor,
which is true at
this point, but which Macbeth has not been told of; and King, which has not yet
become true. The
witches are the ones who plant the actual idea of killing Duncan into Macbeth's
mind. It must first be understood that in the
Elizabethan Age, the witches would have been taken
very seriously,
and that witchcraft was a part of their culture. King James even wrote a book on
the subject. Shakespeare foreshadows Macbeth's corruption
through his meeting with these three
witches.
(I,iii). His thoughts are compared to
Banquo's, whose morality, it seems, will not let
himself turn to
evil. Banquo is skeptical of the
witches, and tries to warn his friend, who
seems to accept
what they say. Without this supernatural
prophesy, the thought of killing the
king would have
never crossed Macbeth's mind. The
thought is then reinforced when Macbeth
learns that he is
Thane of Cawdor, as the witches foretold (I,iii).
Now that Macbeth
has the thought of becoming king inside of him, his is still not capable of
killing
Duncan. His morality keeps him from
performing any such task. He is also fully aware of
the destructive
power of his ambitions. In act I, scene vii, he even tells us:
I have no spur
To prick the sides of my intent, but only
Vaulting ambition, which o'erleaps itself
And falls on the other -
He knows this
will be his downfall. His actions are
only pursued by the persuasiveness of his
wife, Lady
Macbeth, who is even more ambitious than Macbeth himself. She is so ambitious that
she is willing to
sacrifice her femininity and all human feelings for her desire for power (I,v).
The action's of
his own wife are crucial to Macbeth's downfall.
She strengthens his ambitions
and destroys his
nobility.
Once the death of
Duncan has occurred Macbeth is gaining even more ambition and desire for power.
Lady Macbeth will
soon become less and less part of Macbeth's downfall. He soon becomes very
paranoid. He feels he must kill Banquo in order to be
safe (III,i). The next victims are
Macduff's family
(IV,ii). At this point his paranoia has
turned into black-heartedness, and he
will do anything
at all to keep himself safe. Each murder
kills more and more of Macbeth's
morality, and
builds his ambitions. At the point in
which his wife dies, Macbeth seems to care
very little, and
after her death, seems not to care at all.
Macbeth is, as
expected, overthrown and killed. Through
his own ambitions, the ambitions of his
wife, and the
prophesies of the witches, Macbeth has caused his own destruction and
downfall.
We can now
clearly see that ambition not achieved through our own ability leads to
destruction.
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