Analysis Of King Lear: Recognizing The Ending

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Now Lear realizes that the thing that he lost the most is his family and that without them he is nothing. Then with his last breath, that he takes in, “Do you see this? Look at her, look her lips, look at her eyes, look there” (Act 5, Scene 3, 1432-1433). Then he faints or has a heart attack, but in the end he dies. Kent says, “Look up, my Lord. Vex not his ghost. Oh, let him go on into the light! He hates him that would upon the perch of this tough world took him out longer” (Act 5, Scene 3, 1432-1433). In addition to all of the other articles that I have mentioned, here is another article called, “King Lear”: Recognizing the Ending”.
Which talks about, the ending of Shakespeare's play King Lear and what the meaning of the play means that Lear’s death was a triumphant situation and the last words that Lear said showed him going into madness even more after the death of his daughter Cordelia and seeing the death of his other two family members. All the deaths that have that led up to this point, show how much drama that Lear can take upon his old heart and the interpretation of each of the deaths as well which cannot be simply assumed. While Gloucester died between feeling joy and grief at the knowledge that his son Edgar was still alive. But, Lear felt heartbroken and he was in between extreme illusions of the truth and thrown into despair of his daughter’s death.
In the end of all that has happened in the play, William Shakespeare knows that things will begin to change for the better of the world and that nature vs. natural order of things will be a disruption of the natural order of the world and of love itself.

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