ANALYZING KING LEAR’S TRAGIC FLAWS King Lear is a play about a tragic hero‚ by the name of King Lear‚ whose flaws get the best of him. A tragic hero must possess three qualities. The first is they must have power‚ in other words‚ a leader. King Lear has the highest rank of any leader. He is a king. The next quality is they must have a tragic flaw‚ and King Lear has several of those. Finally‚ they must experience a downfall. Lear’s realization of his mistakes is more than a downfall
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King Lear’s egotistical personality gets in the way of many important decisions and inevitably leads to his own suffering. After deciding to divide his kingdom amongst his daughters and live out his life in peace‚ Lear chooses to base the amount of land given to each daughter off how must they love him. Or perhaps‚ how much they say they love him. Goneril and Regan cajole the King‚ using flattery and professing they love him "beyond all manner" (I.I.60). This warms the King’s heart‚ but when Cordelia
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Fear is an unpleasant emotion which humans often experience‚ it comes from knowing something or someone is dangerous and might be harmful in anyway. In the George Orwell’s 1984‚ In William Shakespeare’s King Lear‚ and in the lottery by shirley jackson the theme of fear is portrayed through plot‚ characters and symbols. Usually the plot tells the readers many things about the theme of a story‚ such as the theme of fear. In 1984‚ one of the main things that were emphasized in the plot was
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relates to the play King Lear by William Shakespeare because blindness and values were themes that were seen throughout to course of this play. Ignorance and gullibility are flaws that cause people to focus on pointless things rather than the more valuable things in life. People’s flaws blind them into prioritizing unimportant things. This eventually leads to them realizing that valuing inner qualities & characteristics is more important. In the play King Lear by Shakespeare‚ King Lear’s tragic
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In King Lear‚ Act 4 William Shakespeare shows how the characters can emphasize more than what is being read. The way Shakespeare’s conveys the identities of his characters can be brought to better understanding when reading HTRLLAP. Act 4 continues on with last scene of act 3 when Shakespeare just had blinded one of his characters in the utter most violent way. The torture that Gloucester went through was the revealing of his son’s betrayal‚"I have no way" (pg.78). HTRLLAP illuminates on biblical
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King Lear the Tragic Hero In his Poetics Aristotle defines Tragedy as “an imitation of an action that is serious‚ complete‚ and of a certain magnitude“(Part VI). By Aristotle’s definition‚ a Tragedy imitates human experiences and the misfortunes that can accompany them. It builds and eventually purges pity and fear in readers‚ all while teaching and entertaining. While Tragedy can often be unpleasant or intense‚ “one needs to stand by at some time to Oedipus and hold the knife of his own most terrible
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it be by a dog; but he that is blind in his understanding‚ which is the worst blindness of all‚ believes he sees as the best‚ and scorns a guide." Blindness is a major theme that recurs throughout Shakespeare’s play‚ King Lear. Samuel Butler’s quote can be used to describe King Lear‚ who suffers‚ not from a lack of physical sight‚ but from a lack of insight and understanding. Blindness is a factor in his poor judgment. It plays a major role in the bad decisions he makes. It leads to harsh treatment
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“There’s the sulphurous pit:” Female Sexuality in King Lear King Lear takes a very negative view of feminine sexuality from the first scene. In line 15 of scene 1 when Gloucester asks Kent “Do you smell a fault?” (Shakespeare‚ 1110)‚ the editor’s notes indicate that “fault” can refer to either wrongdoing or female genitals. Indeed the speech between them is rife with misogyny. Gloucester goes on to say that there was “good sport‚” at Edmund’s conception‚ and goes on to call him a “whoreson
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continual character in the workings of Shakespeare. The Fool is usually a cunning peasant that uses his intellect to outdo people of a higher social status. This is particularly the case in the play King Lear. Lear’s jester‚ the Fool‚ is indeed a very strange character. He uses crazy talk and merry songs to give Lear important advice. Not only is he important in the development of the plot but he’s important in the development of Lear’s character and also has an important role in the development of the mood
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Good versus Evil in King Lear Life will always bestow us with choices which we must wisely choose either a moral or immoral response to. Shakespeare exemplifies goodness and wickedness in King Lear. The play presents a powerful manifestation of loyalty‚ specifically through the characters Kent‚ Edgar‚ and Cordelia. Kent’s unrestricted loyalty to Lear remains stable throughout the play. He recognizes Lear’s tragic flaw and remains faithful‚ even after being banished. His reliability is further
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