William Shakespeare's Macbeth offers one of the most penetrating studies of ambition, conscience and moral disintegration in English drama. The play traces the transformation of Macbeth from a loyal and heroic warrior into a tyrannical ruler whose reign is sustained by violence and fear. At the outset, Macbeth embodies courage, honour and devotion to king and country. However, the prophecy of the witches awakens latent ambition and Lady Macbeth's provocation converts imagined desire into decisive action. Once Macbeth violates moral and social order through the murder of King Duncan, he enters a cycle of bloodshed that erodes conscience, destabilizes identity and destroys inner peace. Shakespeare dramatizes this tragic arc through soliloquies that reveal psychological struggle, imagery of blood and darkness that reflects moral corruption and supernatural elements that externalize inner conflict. This paper examines Macbeth's descent through close textual analysis and integrates major critical interpretations to illuminate psychological, political and ideological dimensions of the tragedy. Ultimately, Macbeth's tragedy lies not merely in the loss of power but in the annihilation of meaning and moral identity. Shakespeare's Macbeth, thus, remains a timeless warning about the destructive consequences of unchecked ambition and the catastrophic price of ethical surrender.
Dr. Rajiv Kumar (Mon,) studied this question.