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- Essay Name : 1460.txt
- Uploader : Tom Shortledge
- Email Address :
- Language : english
- Subject : Shakespeare
- Title : King Lear
- Grade : 85
- School System : High School
- Country : US
- Author Comments :
- Teacher Comments : good work. but you made some spelling mistakes
- Date : 10/3
- Site found at : School Sucks
- --------------------------------------------------------------
-
- King lear
-
-
-
- Shakespeare's tragedy King Lear is a detailed description of
- the consequences of one man's decisions. This fictitious man is
- Lear, King of England, who's decisions greatly alter his life and
- the lives of those around him. As Lear bears the status of King he
- is, as one expects, a man of great power but sinfully he surrenders
- all of this power to his daughters as a reward for their
- demonstration of love towards him. This untimely abdication of his
- throne results in a chain reaction of events that send him through
- a journey of hell. King Lear is a metaphorical description of one
- man's journey through hell in order to expiate his sin.
- As the play opens one can almost immediately see that Lear
- begins to make mistakes that will eventually result in his
- downfall. The very first words that he speaks in the play are :-
-
- "...Give me the map there. Know that we have
- divided
- In three our kingdom, and 'tis our fast intent
- To shake all cares and business from our age,
- Conferring them on younger strengths while we
- Unburdened crawl to death..."
- (Act I, Sc i, Ln 38-41)
-
-
- This gives the reader the first indication of Lear's intent to
- abdicate his throne. He goes on further to offer pieces of his
- kingdom to his daughters as a form of reward to his test of love.
-
- "Great rivals in our youngest daughter's love,
- Long in our court have made their amorous
- sojourn,
- And here are to be answered. Tell me, my
- daughters
- (Since now we will divest us both of rule,
- Interest of territory, cares of state),
- Which of you shall we say doth love us most?
- That we our largest bounty may extend
- where nature doth with merit challenge."
- (Act I, Sc i, Ln 47-53)
-
-
- This is the first and most significant of the many sins that he
- makes in this play. By abdicating his throne to fuel his ego he is
- disrupts the great chain of being which states that the King must
- not challenge the position that God has given him. This
- undermining of God's authority results in chaos that tears apart
- Lear's world. Leaving him, in the end, with nothing. Following
- this Lear begins to banish those around him that genuinely care for
- him as at this stage he cannot see beyond the mask that the evil
- wear. He banishes Kent, a loyal servant to Lear, and his youngest
- and previously most loved daughter Cordelia. This results in Lear
- surrounding himself with people who only wish to use him which
- leaves him very vulnerable attack. This is precisely what happens
- and it is through this that he discovers his wrongs and amends
- them.
- Following the committing of his sins, Lear becomes abandoned
- and estranged from his kingdom which causes him to loose insanity.
- While lost in his grief and self-pity the fool is introduced to
- guide Lear back to the sane world and to help find the lear that
- was ounce lost behind a hundred Knights but now is out in the open
- and scared like a little child. The fact that Lear has now been
- pushed out from behind his Knights is dramatically represented by
- him actually being out on the lawns of his castle. The terrified
- little child that is now unsheltered is dramatically portrayed by
- Lear's sudden insanity and his rage and anger is seen through the
- thunderous weather that is being experienced. All of this
- contributes to the suffering of Lear due to the gross sins that he
- has committed.
- The pinnacle of this hell that is experienced be Lear in order
- to repay his sins is at the end of the play when Cordelia is
- killed. Lear says this before he himself dies as he cannot live
- without his daughter.
-
- "Howl, howl, howl! O, you are men of stones.
- Had I your tongues and eyes, I'd use them so
- That heaven's vault should crack. She's gone
- for ever!
- I know when one is dead, and when one lives.
- She's dead as earth. Lend me a looking glass.
- If that her breath will mist or stain the
- stone,
- Why, then she lives."
- (Act V, Sc iii, Ln 306-312)
-
-
- All of this pain that Lear suffered is traced back to the
- single most important error that he made. The choice to give up
- his throne. This one sin has proven to have massive repercussions
- upon Lear and the lives of those around him eventually killing
- almost all of those who were involved. And one is left to ask
- one's self if a single wrong turn can do this to Lear then what
- difficult corner lies ahead that ma cause similar alterations in
- one's life.
- Reference List
-
-
-
-
-
- Shakespeare, William. King Lear. Eric A.
- McCann, ed. Harcourt Brace Jovanovick
- Canada Inc., Canada. 1988.
- There has been many different views on the plays of William
- Shakespeare and definitions of what kind of play they were. The
- two most popular would be the comedy and the tragedy. King Lear to
- some people may be a comedy because they believe that the play has
- been over exaggerated. Others would say King Lear was a tragedy
- because there is so much suffering and chaos.
- What makes a Shakespearean play a comedy or a tragedy? King
- Lear would be a tragedy because it meets all the requirements of a
- tragedy as defined by Andrew Cecil Bradley. Bradley states that a
- Shakespearean tragedy must have to be the story of the hero and
- that there is exceptional suffering and calamity slowly being worn
- in as well as it being contrasted to happier times. The play also
- depicts the troubled parts in his life and eventually his death
- that is instantaneous caused by the suffering and calamity. There
- is the feeling of fear in the play as well, that makes men see how
- blind they are not knowing when fortune or something else would be
- on them. The hero must be of a high status on the chain and the
- hero also possesses a tragic flaw that initiates the tragedy. The
- fall of the hero is not felt by him alone but creates a chain
- reaction which affects everything below him. There must also be
- the element of chance or accident that influences some point in the
- play.
- King Lear meets all of these requirements that has been laid
- out by Bradley which is the most logical for a definition of a
- tragedy as compared to the definition of a comedy by G. Wilson
- Knight.
-
- The main character of the play would be King Lear who in terms
- of Bradley would be the hero and hold the highest position is the
- social chain. Lear out of Pride and anger has banished Cordelia
- and split the kingdom in half to the two older sisters, Goneril and
- Regan. This is Lear's tragic flaw which prevents him to see the
- true faces of people because his pride and anger overrides his
- judgement. As we see in the first act, Lear does not listen to
- Kent's plea to see closer to the true faces of his daughters. Kent
- has hurt Lear's pride by disobeying his order to stay out of his
- and Cordelia's way when Lear has already warned him, "The bow is
- bent and drawn, make from the shaft." Kent still disobeys Lear
- and is banished. Because of this flaw, Lear has initiated the
- tragedy by disturbing the order in the chain of being by dividing
- the kingdom, banishing his best servant and daughter, and giving up
- his thrown.
- Due to this flaw, Lear has given way to the two older
- daughters to conspire against him. Lear is finally thrown out of
- his daughters home and left with a fool, a servant and a beggar.
- This is when Lear realizes the mistake that he has made and suffers
- the banishment of his two eldest daughters. Lear is caught in a
- storm and begins to lose his sanity because he can not bear the
- treatment of his two daughters as well as the error he has made
- with Cordelia and Kent. Lear also suffers from rest when he is
- moving all over the place and the thing that breaks him is the
- death of his youngest daughter Cordelia. This suffering can be
- contrasted with other happier times like when Lear was still king
- and when he was not banished by his two daughters.
- The feeling of fear is when Lear is in the storm raging
- against the gods,
- "I tax not you, you elements, with unkindness.
- I never gave you kingdom, called you children,
- you owe me no subscription.",
- telling them to rage harder since he has not done anything for them
- and that he didn't deserve what he has received from his two
- daughters. The fear is how Lear in a short period of time went
- from king to just a regular peasant and from strong and prideful to
- weak and unconfident. This shows that men do not hold their own
- destiny and that even though things may be great now you can be
- struck down just as fast as was to Lear.
- The fall of Lear is not just the suffering of one man but the
- suffering of everyone down the chain. Gloucester loses his status
- and eyes, Cordelia and Kent banished, and Albany realizing his
- wife's true heart. Everything that happened to these characters
- are affected by Lear in one way or another and that if Lear had not
- banished Cordelia and Kent then the two sisters would not be able
- to plot against their father. Without the plot of the two sisters
- then Gloucester would not of lost his eyes to Cornwall and his
- status because he was guilty of treason.
- There is an element of chance in the play in which Edgar meets
- Oswald trying to kill his father because he is a traitor. Oswald
- is slain asks Edgar,
- "And give the letters which thou find'st about
- me to Edmund Earl of Gloucester. Seek him out
- upon the English party."
- Edgar finds a letter to Edmund from Goneril about the conspiracy
- to kill Albany. This part in the play affects the outcome of
- Goneril and Edmund in which will lead to both of their deaths.
- The pain and suffering endured by Lear eventually tears down
- his strength and sanity. Lear is not as strong, arrogant, and
- prideful as he was in the beginning of the play instead he is weak,
- scared, and a confused old man. At the end of the play Lear has
- completely lost his sanity with the loss of his daughter Cordelia
- and this is the thing that breaks Lear and leads to his death.
- Lear dies with the knowledge that Cordelia is dead and dies as a
- man in pain.
- "And my poor fool is hanged! No, no, no life!
- Why should a dog, a horse, a rat, have life,
- And thou no breath at all? Thou'lt come no
- more, never, never, never, never, never!"
-
- King Lear has met all the requirements that Bradley has stated
- as a Shakespearean tragedy. Lear has a tragic flaw which is his
- pride that prevents him to see the true faces of people. He also
- initiates the tragedy by the banishment of Cordelia and Kent as
- well as dividing the kingdom. Lear has also suffered and endured
- the pains of his error which leads to his death and which is
- contrasted to that of happier times. There is the feeling of fear
- in the play which is of a King losing his crown and becoming a
- peasant. Lear has also created a chain reaction that affects
- everything down the chain. The element of chance is also
- introduced in the play with Edgar and Oswald, Oswald possessing the
- letter to Edmund. And the final part is the death of King Lear
- dying in suffering of the death of his daughter Cordelia.
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