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  • Organic Imagery
  • Juxtaposition
  • Foreshadowing
  • Genuinely vs Ingenuity
  • Zoomorphism
  • Literal Imagery
  • Parallelism
  • “nothing will come of nothing speak again.”(Lr. 1.1.92)
  • Comparison
  • Physical vs Mental
  • Verbal and dramatic irony
  • Lear's Nihilism
  • Figurative Imagery
  • Elderly Age
  • Contrasting
  • Parent vs Child Themes
  • Visual Imagery
  • Act 5 scene 3, "the British camp near Dover"(Lr.5.3.1)
  • “Howl howl howl howl!”(Lr.5.3.257)
  • “Thou’lt come no more, Never never never.”(Lr.5.3.307-308).
  • "Open country near Dover. Enter Lear, mad, garlanded with wildflowers"(Lr.4.6.1-3). (Lr.4.6.79).
  • Specifically, in a religious sense According to Jessica Vanden Berg’s paper titled: “Grace, Consequences, and Christianity in King Lear” the person of subject she references concerns Reuben A.Brower who regards the Christian references in the book. He acknowledges that the nature of the characters of the play is not based of Christian morality and ethics as he regards this in his work of literature: Hero and Saint: “Similar biblical and Christian allusions qualify character and attitude at many points in King Lear, though the play is not an accurate 'illustration' of Christian doctrine. Lear is not 'redeemed' or 'saved,' and his death is too terrible, too unrelieved by any thought of compensation in another life” (403). Do you agree with this quotation that even in the afterlife Lear is unforgivable when he was a man in opposition to integrity of righteousness and performed poorly executed actions in the play?
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