The female images in Shakespeare's works are angels of mankind. They are so beautiful that they have no color at all. Ophelia in Hamlet is a sweet and sad song floating in a dream. She naturally fell in love with Hamlet, but from Hamlet's crazy language, she felt that everything was incredible. Her delicate soul can't stand the blow of reality, her ideals are disillusioned and her spirit is crazy. She sang old love songs, woven garlands and died in the stream. Ophelia is a symbol of pure love. In Othello, Desdemona is a beautiful and pure woman. The praise of pen and ink can't describe her benefits. She dared to break through the secular prejudice and marry a powerful Moor privately, but she was jealous of him for no reason. She died at the hands of her beloved, but she didn't blame her "good husband" until her death. Here we see a kind of forgiveness beyond nature, which is of course a manifestation of loyal and brave love, but from it we can feel a painful symbolic revelation, that is, pure beauty has been destroyed by the Force for no reason. Cordelia in King Lear is a simple girl who lives in her ideal world from beginning to end and treats evil forces with innocence and kindness. Her tragic ending is sympathetic. Therefore, we can say that Cordelia is a symbol of purity and kindness.