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- Date sent: Tue, 09 Apr 1996 06:23:51 -0700
-
- King Lear, by William Shakespeare, is a tragic tale of filial
- conflict, personal transformation, and loss. The story revolves
- around the King who foolishly alienates his only truly devoted
- daughter and realizes too late the true nature of his other two
- daughters. A major subplot involves the illegitimate son of
- Gloucester, Edmund, who plans to discredit his brother Edgar and
- betray his father. With these and other major characters in the
- play, Shakespeare clearly asserts that human nature is either
- entirely good, or entirely evil. Some characters experience a
- transformative phase, where by some trial or ordeal their nature
- is profoundly changed. We shall examine Shakespeare's stand on
- human nature in King Lear by looking at specific characters in
- the play: Cordelia who is wholly good, Edmund who is wholly
- evil, and Lear whose nature is transformed by the realization of
- his folly and his descent into madness.
-
- The play begins with Lear, an old king ready for retirement,
- preparing to divide the kingdom among his three daughters. Lear
- has his daughters compete for their inheritance by judging who
- can proclaim their love for him in the grandest possible
- fashion. Cordelia finds that she is unable to show her love
- with mere words:
-
- "Cordelia. [Aside] What shall Cordelia speak? Love,
-
- and be silent."
-
- Act I, scene i, lines 63-64.
-
- Cordelia's nature is such that she is unable to engage in even
- so forgivable a deception as to satisfy an old king's vanity and
- pride, as we see again in the following quotation:
-
- "Cordelia. [Aside] Then poor cordelia!
-
- And not so, since I am sure my love's
-
- More ponderous than my tongue. "
-
- Act I, Scene i, lines 78-80.
-
- Cordelia clearly loves her father, and yet realizes that her
- honesty will not please him. Her nature is too good to allow
- even the slightest deviation from her morals. An impressive
- speech similar to her sisters' would have prevented much
- tragedy, but Shakespeare has crafted Cordelia such that she
- could never consider such an act. Later in the play Cordelia,
- now banished for her honesty, still loves her father and
- displays great compassion and grief for him as we see in the
- following:
-
- "Cordelia. O my dear father, restoration hang
-
- Thy medicine on my lips, and let this kiss
-
- Repair those violent harms that my two sisters
-
- Have in reverence made."
-
- Act IV, Scene vii, lines 26-29.
-
- Cordelia could be expected to display bitterness or even
- satisfaction at her father's plight, which was his own doing.
- However, she still loves him, and does not fault him for the
- injustice he did her. Clearly, Shakespeare has crafted Cordelia
- as a character whose nature is entirely good, unblemished by any
- trace of evil throughout the entire play.
-
- As an example of one of the wholly evil characters in the play,
- we shall turn to the subplot of Edmund's betrayal of his father
- and brother. Edmund has devised a scheme to discredit his
- brother Edgar in the eyes of their father Gloucester. Edmund is
- fully aware of his evil nature, and revels in it as seen in the
- following quotation:
-
- "Edmund. This is the excellent foppery of the world,
-
- that when we are sick in fortune, often the surfeits
-
- of our own behaviour, we make guilty of our disasters
-
- the sun, the moon, and stars; as if we were
-
- villains on necessity; fools by heavenly compulsion;
-
- knaves, thieves, and treachers by spherical
-
- predominance; drunkards, liars, and adulterers by
-
- an enforced obedience of planetary influence; and
-
- all that we are evil in, by a divine thrusting on.
-
- ... I should have been that I
-
- am, had the maidenliest star in the firmament twinkled
-
- on my bastardizing."
-
- Act I, scene ii, lines 127-137, 143-145.
-
- Clearly, Edmund recognizes his own evil nature and decides to
- use it to his advantage. He mocks the notion of any kind of
- supernatural or divine influence over one's destiny. Edgar must
- go into hiding because of Edmund's deception, and later Edmund
- betrays Gloucester himself, naming him a traitor which results
- in Gloucester's eyes being put out. Edmund feels not the
- slightest remorse for any of his actions. Later on, after the
- invading French army has been repelled, Lear and Cordelia have
- been taken captive and Edmund gives these chilling words to his
- captain:
-
- "Edmund. Come hither captain; hark.
-
- Take thou this note: go follow them to prison;
-
- One step I have advanced thee; if thou dost
-
- As this instructs thee, thou dost make thy way
-
- To noble fortunes: know thou this, that men
-
- Are as the time is: to be tender-minded
-
- Does not become a sword: thy great employment
-
- Will not bear question; either say thou'lt do't,
-
- Or thrive by other means."
-
- Act V, scene iii, lines 27-34.
-
- Edmund has just instructed his captain to take Lear and Cordelia
- away to prison and to kill them, and make it look like suicide.
- Obviously there is no limit to the depths of Edmund's evil.
- Shakespeare has created a perfect villain, with no remorse, no
- compassion, and who is universally despised by readers of the
- play. In the end, mortally wounded, Edmund does regret his
- actions and attempts to undo some of the hurt he has caused, and
- so perhaps we could also say Edmund is one of the characters who
- undergoes a transformation in the end. However, up until that
- point, Edmund remains a classic villain, whose human nature is
- entirely evil.
-
- At the beginning of the play, we see Lear as a proud, vain,
- quick-tempered old king, not necessarily evil, but certainly not
- good. His folly leads to the alienation of his one truly loving
- daughter Cordelia, and the revelation that Regan and Goneril's
- profession of love for him were mere empty words. Turned away
- by both Regan and Goneril, Lear rails against the storm and
- screams "I am a man more sinned against than sinning." (Act III,
- scene ii, lines 56,57). Here Lear still believes he is the
- victim; and yet there is some admission on his part that he has
- some guilt in the matter. After the storm, when Lear's madness
- has run its course, both he and Cordelia are taken prisoner by
- Albany's army. We see the full effect of Lear's transformation
- in his joy at his reunion with his daughter, uncaring of his
- status as a prisoner:
-
- "He that parts us shall bring a brand from heaven,
-
- And fire us hence like foxes. Wipe thine eyes;
-
- The good years shall devour them, flesh and fell,
-
- Ere they shall make us weep. We'll see 'em starved first."
-
- Act V, scene iii lines 22-25
-
- This new carefree Lear is certainly a far cry from the arrogant
- king we saw at the beginning of the play. His joy at
- reconciliation with his daughter outweighs any other concerns he
- might have. Shakespeare has transformed Lear in the reader's
- eyes from a hateful old king into almost a grandfatherly, loving
- figure. It is not necessarily a transformation from evil into
- good; rather it is a transformation from blindness into sight.
-
- In King Lear, we have seen that Shakespeare has carefully
- crafted the characters and clearly defined their human natures
- as being good or evil. There is no doubting the absolute
- goodness that Cordelia maintains throughout the play, and the
- sheer evil that Edmund displays until his plans are in ruins.
- In Lear we see a flawed figure who by misfortune and loss
- finally comes to revelation and personal transformation. In
- that sense, these characters are perfect tragic figures, perhaps
- not necessarily realistic but powerful and moving nonetheless.
-
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