King Lear - Imagery - Sight and Blindness
King Lear - Imagery - Sight and Blindness
King Lear - Imagery - Sight and Blindness
There is literal and metaphorical blindness in King Lear. Sight is linked to good
judgement and when Lear disowns Cordelia – ordering her ‘out of [his] sight’,
ad then disowns Kent too, Kent advises him to reconsider his rash action and
urges him to ‘See better’. Lear’s blindness here is his inability to see that it is
Cordelia who is the honest and natural daughter while it is Goneril and Regan
who are not to be trusted. Lear takes the evil daughters’ words at face value,
however, and as a result he sets in motion a chain of events which will
ultimately lead to chaos and tragedy.
It is also worth reflecting that it was Lear’s blind love for Cordelia that led to
his setting up the love test. He was so confident that his youngest daughter
would declare her love for him openly and in flattering terms that he was
blindsided by her refusal to do so and by her obvious distaste for her sisters’
vying for their father’s approval.
When Goneril turns on Lear, ignoring his summons and telling him coldly to
behave a little more wisely and appropriately, the old king is so shocked that
he asks:
Doth any here know me? This is not Lear:
Doth Lear walk thus? speak thus? Where are his eyes?
Either his notion weakens, his discernings
Are lethargied--Ha! waking? 'tis not so.
Who is it that can tell me who I am?
It is only when he is wandering in the storm that Lear begins to see how things
really are. He realises now that Goneril and Regan only pretended to love him
in order to get a large share of the kingdom and that they have no interest
whatsoever in him now that he is of no further use to them. The Fool makes it
clear in one of his rhymes:
Fathers that wear rags
Do make their children blind;
But fathers that bear bags
Shall see their children kind.
Gloucester is also blind the the reality of his children’s natures. Although
Edgar has done nothing whatsoever to deserve suspicion, Gloucester
immediately believes Edmund’s forged letter and turns on his innocent and
good son. Ironically, when asking Edmund to show him the letter, Gloucester