King British King King clearly saw that hero of the tragedy of the same name of Shakespeare experienced radical change of men, father, king. Leah was originally portrayed as a hidden ruler who relied on protests against his daughter's love to distribute his kingdom. The tragic defect of Leah is that his kingdom is divided due to his pride and can not see the true nature of the people and proves that his harsh anger transcends his judgment It has been.
In Shakespeare's classic tragedy, King Rear, the theme of recurrence is related to visual problems and that it is related to clear eyesight. The main way to draw this theme of Shake Spear is through the roles of Leah and Gloucester. Lear can see it with your own eyes, but he lacks insight, understanding and direction. In contrast, Gloucester became physically blind, but he gained the vision that the rear was missing. It is clear that the obvious vision from these two roles is not entirely from the physical vision. Leah could not understand that this was the main reason for his death, and Gloucester learned to achieve a clear vision, hence avoiding fate like Leah.
In King Lear, a clear vision is the attribute of two main characters. Lear explained the lack of sight, but Gloucester learned that clear eyesight is not from the eyes. Through the script, Shakespeare said that the world can not be seen by the eyes, but can not be seen with the soul. The physical world in which the eyes can be detected, therefore, may hide the physical properties of its evil possessions so that it is impossible for the eye alone to produce clear vision. The fall of Leah is the result of that he can not understand the appearance and does not necessarily represent the reality. By learning the relationship between appearance and reality, Gloucester avoided similar disappearance. If Lear learns to learn that not only his own eyes, he may have avoided this tragedy.