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- subject = British Literature
- title = A Critical Analysis of King Leer's Daughters'Attraction to Edmund.
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- ShakespeareÆ King Lear is a story of treachery and
- deceit. The villainy of the play knows no bounds. Family
- lines are ignored in an overwhelming quest for power. This
- villainy is epitomized in the character of Edmund, bastard
- son of the Earl of Gloucester.
- Edmund is displayed as a " most toad-spotted
- traitor." When we first see Edmund, he is already knee
- deep in treachery. His need for power has already clouded
- his mind to the extent that his first act is a double-
- cross of his own brother. Edmund composes a false letter
- to his father implicating his brother, Edgar in a plot to
- kill Gloucester. Edmund then goes to Edgar and convinces
- him to run away. Edgar, like his father is easily deceived,
- and runs.
- EdmundÆs evil trickery continues to increase in its
- cruelty until he commits an inconceivable crime. Edmund
- has reached a point in his pursuit of power that he will
- stop at nothing to gain more. He writes another letter.
- This one is similar to the first, except instead of
- implicating his brother to his father, it implicates his
- father in a plot with France to kill The Duke of Cornwall.
- The King decides that GloucesterÆs supposed treachery
- cannot be tolerated and orders that his eyes be torn out.
- At this point, Edmund seems to be unequivocally evil.
- This is undoubtedly false.
- Two of the other characters of the play, Goneril and
- Regan surely equal EdmundÆs ferocity in their quest for
- power. Our first glimpse at the two surely begins to prove
- that fact. In this scene, the King asks that each of his
- three daughters profess their undying love to him before
- he distributes parts of the kingdom to them. Goneril and
- Regan both, unlike their sister Cordelia who is to true of
- heart to sink to such a level, give incredibly pompous
- speeches telling of how great their love for their father
- is. The speeches, as we soon find out, are total lies.
- As soon as they receive their land, the two, accompanied
- by their husbands, join forces, and, using their newly
- found power, strip their father of all power. They used
- their fatherÆs own need for affection to manipulate him
- and take his power. This is indeed an act worthy of the
- most disgusting of personÆs.
- Having taken this very quick glimpse into King Lear
- shows us a very good reason for both Goneril and Regan to
- be attracted to Edmund. Edmund shares their ambition-power.
- He shares their strength-treachery. And he is possibly
- the only person more evil than they are. Evil has a
- tendency to align itself with evil. In its constant quest
- to triumph over good evil unites to gain power. The two
- daughters follow this pattern. They are instinctively
- drawn to the pure evil that emanates from EdmundÆs very
- being. Their attraction to Edmund is merely a symptom of
- their quest for power.
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