King Lear Sight

King Lear - Sight


In Shakespeare’s “King Lear” the issue of sight against blindness is a recurring theme. Blindness refers to be unable to see the right from the wrong or good from the bad. King Lear and Gloucester are two prime examples of this theme. Even thou, Lear and Gloucester share the same mental flaw, it’s nature, it’s causes, and its effect was different. Each of these characters blindness was the primary cause of the unfortunate decisions they made, decisions that they would eventually regret.

The nature of Gloucester’s blindness was that he was unable to see the goodness of Edgar and the evil of Edmund. Gloucester was unable to see what was going around him. Instead, he only saw what was on the surface. Edmund caused Gloucester’s blindness. On the other hand, Lear also sees what is on the surface, and cannot understand the deeper intentions of his daughters’ speeches. Lear does not realize that his daughters, Goneril and Regan were out to destroy him, by taking everything he has.

The cause of Gloucester’s blindness was that he never got both sides of the story. Gloucester’s blindness began when Edmund convinced him by means of a forged letter that Edgar was plotting to kill him. Before Gloucester even got a chance to talk to Edgar, he considered him a traitorous villain. Lear’s blindness was due to...

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