• The Fate of The Blind. Interprets Blindness in King Lear (by Shakepseare) and Oedipus

     

    Essays3 Literature

Evaluation:
Published: 08.11.1996.
Language: English
Level: Secondary school
Literature: n/a
References: Not used
  • Essays 'The Fate of The Blind. Interprets Blindness in King Lear (by Shakepseare) and Oe', 1.
  • Essays 'The Fate of The Blind. Interprets Blindness in King Lear (by Shakepseare) and Oe', 2.
  • Essays 'The Fate of The Blind. Interprets Blindness in King Lear (by Shakepseare) and Oe', 3.
Extract

'There's a divinity that shapes our ends, rough hew them how we will.' These words from Hamlet are echoed, even more pessimistically, in Shakespeare's later play, The Tragedy of King Lear where Gloucester says: 'Like flies to wanton boys, are we to the gods, they kill us for their sport'. In Lear, the characters are subjected to the various tragedies of life over and over again.
An abundance of cyclic imagery in Lear shows that good people are abused and wronged regardless of their own noble deeds or intentions. Strapped to a wheel of fire, humans suffer and endure, prosper and decline, their very existence imaged as a voyage out and a return. …

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