Critic – Lear’s blindness causes tragedy | “If Lear had learned to look with more than just his eyes, he might have avoided this tragedy” |
Gonerils flattery | • “Dearer than eyesight, space or liberty” Goneril• “A love that makes breath poor and speech unable” |
Kent blindness | • “Reverse thy doom”/”Revoke thy doom” – Kent – doom meaning Cordelia’s sentence but also his own doom• Believes “majesty stoops to folly”• “See better, Lear, and let me still remain/The true blank of thine eye” i.e look to him for guidance |
Cordelia insult | “sometime daughter” and “a wretch whom nature is ashamed” |
Cordelia’s logic | • Seen by Cordelia’s sound logic – Why have my sisters husbands if they say/ They love you all?” |
Fool’s warnings | “may not an ass know when the cart draws the horse” (inverted behaviour) and about R “she’s as like this as a crab is like an apple” |
Lear kindness | • Asks Fool “How dost my boy? Art cold?”• “Poor naked wretches”• “O, I have ta’en/ too little care of this” |
Kent about Lears shame | “burning shame/Detains him from Cordelia” – also says “A sovereign shame so elbows him” |
Lear’s tears/wheel of fire | • “I am bound/Upon a wheel of fire, that mine own tears/Do scald like molten lead” |
Foolish | • “I am a very foolish, fond old man” |
Sin | • “I am a man more sinned against than sinning” |
Sorrow | “a chance which does redeem all sorrows” |
Crown | “crowned with rank fumitor and furrow weeds” |
Still mad at end | “I killed the slave” and Kent “He knows not what he sees” |
Lear cruelty | • “a wretch whom nature is ashamed”• To G “Degenerate bastard”• “you unnatural hags” |
Cordelia second chance | “mend your speech a little/ Lest it may mar your fortunes” |
Beasts | “Allow not nature more than nature needs/Man’s life’s as cheap as beasts” |
Goneril asks nicely | “I do beseech you/To understand my purposes” |
Critic – anxiety | • Kahn – Believes the play is about “male anxiety”, |
Loss of identity | “Doth any here know me? Why this is not Lear” – instead is “Lear’s shadow” |
daughter stranger | “a stranger to my heart and me”, “sometime daughter” and to G “Are you our daughter?” |
Base creature/slave | “Here I stand your slave/A poor infirm weak and despised old man” |
Poor Tom to Lear | “I will keep still with my philosopher” |
Critic – precipitate | “In presuming to be adored like a god instead of honoured like a father, Lear precipitated the tragedy” |
Critic – early modern | “King Lear articulates pressing contemporary concerns about the power of early modern kings” |
10 commandments | “Obey you, love you and most honour you” |
Fortune | • “The natural fool of fortune” and “Fortune, good night/Smile; once more turn thy wheel” |
Critic – gods | “the gods are, at best, callously just” |
Critic – knights | “microcosm of the human race” |
Nothing | “Nothing can come of nothing”, “This is nothing fool” “Nothing can be made out of nothing” (Lear); “Edgar I nothing am”; “I am a fool, thou art nothing” (Fool) etc |
Worst | “The worst returns to laughter” to “The worst is not/As long as we can say “This is the worst”” |
Stichomythia | “Hang him instantly”, “Pluck out his eyes” |
Jelly | “Out, vile jelly/ Where is thy lustre now?” |
Flies | “As flies to wanton boys are we to th’ gods/They kill us for their sport” |
Circle | “The wheel is come full circle” |
Kent dark | “All’s cheerless, dark and deadly” |
Cordelia soul | “a soul in bliss” |
Edgar regret | “Never-O father! -revealed myself” |
Critic-not just | • Bradley – King Lear is “monstrously unjust” |
Critic – destiny | • Courthope – “In no other of his plays, except in King Lear, are we left with such an impression of the overmastering power of destiny” |
Critic – hope | • Knight – “there is no hope save in the…limp body of death” |
Critic – moral order | “There is a faith in a universal moral order which cannot be defeated” |
Justice heavens | “The justice of the heavens, that makes us tremble” |
Critic – wicked | “it is debatable who the wicked and the virtuous are” |
Critic about loss of identity | “This self-imposed persona estranges Lear from his audience; his vulnerability as a human is masked by his rash behaviour” |
Critic – why madness (persona) | “shed his persona, and simultaneously persuading the audience that Lear is worthy of pity” |
Critic – madness | • Knight – “In madness, thoughts deep-buried come to the surface.” |
Critic – society | • Weimann – references to society are used “to provide…a generally valid image of the world”• Steinmetz – “brings the theme of suffering on to a more general level” |
Madness – progression | • Beginning of madness “I did her wrong”• Proceeded by “I will forget my nature”• Reduced to base level of a fool -Thou wouldst make a good fool”• “O, let me not be mad, sweet heaven!”• Repetition of “I would not be mad” creates sympathy – shows his fears and that he is vulnerable – not like an untouchable king• Now knows he is mad – “O fool, I shall go mad”, “My wit begins to turn” |
Storm causes madness | this contentious storm/Invades us to the skin” |
Critic – shed persona | “shed his own blinding pride” (in shedding wealth, sanity etc) |
Critic- under clothes | “Under his clothes, the King is equal to the beggar” |
Lear child | • Image of Lear as a child creates even more sympathy – Cordelia “child changed father”, G “Old fools are babes again” |
Edmund dark | “The dark and vicious place where thee got/Cost him his eyes” |
Corrupted blood | Lear’s “corrupted blood” vs Gloucester “Our flesh and blood is grown so vile” |
Hearts cracking | – G “my old heart is cracked, is cracked” vs Lear “this heart/shall break into a hundred thousand flaws” |
Blindness parallels | • “I stumbled when I saw” vs “I did her wrong”, “poor naked wretches” |
Critic – heart and eyes | “Shakespeare is saying that the world cannot truly be seen with the eye, but with the heart” |
Critic – foil | Gloucester “serves as a foil to emphasize the titanic power” of Lear |
Gloucester weaker | “Better I were distraught/So should my thoughts be fenced from my griefs” |
Critic – senex | – Frye – the play uses “the regular comedy theme of the gullible “senex” swindled by a clever and unprincipled son”• Gloucester plays the role of the “senex” and Edmund the “adulescens” -regular characters in Roman comedies |
Edgar comedy | Edgar appears “like the catastrophe of the old comedy”- |
Critic – role of subplot | original purpose of subplots were to “alleviate the seriousness of the actions of the main plot” |
Critic r+g deaths | • Schlegel – the “criminal passion” Regan and Gonoril felt for Edmund is what “induces them to execute justice on each other and on themselves” |
Edmund loved | • Edmund admits Regan was “poisoned for my sake” and Gonoril “slew herself” because he was “beloved” by both: “Yet Edmund was beloved” |
R+G rivalry | • Similarly G “I had rather lose the battle than that sister/Should loosen him and me””That were the most if he should husband you” and Regan offers “‘Jest do oft prove prophets” as a riposte |
Edmund bastard | • “Legitimate Edgar, I must have your land”• Calls himself “the bastard Edmund”• “Why “bastard”? Wherefore “base”?” |
Edmund younger | • “The younger rises when the old doth fall |
Edmund subject | “I hold you but as a subject of this war/Not as a brother” |
Edmund goddess | “Thou, nature, art my goddess” |
Critic- Edmund law | • Capet – By vowing to nature, “he sets himself outside the reach of customary law and of human morality” |
Edmund sport | was “good sport at his making”, |
Critic – edmund force | “Edmund is a force of Nature-a violent assertion of natural law and natural order” – he causes Gloucester’s punishment himself – would never be punished otherwise as he is of the aristocracy |
Edmund redeemed | “Some good I mean to do/Despite of my own nature”• “The wheel is come full circled” i.e. he is punished for what he set in motion |
Cordelia bond | • Cordelia – “I love your majesty/According to my bond” and “as are right fit/Obey you, love you and most honour you” |
Disease | • “a disease that lies within my flesh” |
Critic – fool | • Lowe – “The Fool serves as a symbol of truth” |
Mutiny | -“In cities, mutinies…and the bond cracked twixt son and father” |
Critic- moral anarchy | “moral anarchy erupts when the natural hierarchical relationships…are viewed as unnatural” |
Critic- animal kingdom | • Kalpakgian – “human society is transformed into an animal kingdom” |
Arms | I must change arms at home/And give the distaff into my husband’s hands” – distaff was staff on which wool was wound for spinning – represents women |
Gonoril laws | “the laws are mine, not thine” |
Gonoril wolf | wolvish visage |
Foot | • “My foot usurps my body” |
Fiend | • Albany – “thou art a fiend/A woman’s shape doth shield thee” |
Critic – R+G demons | “Gonoril and Regan are clearly represented as demons, monsters, anything but human” |
Critic – Cordelia | • Rubio – “Cordelia works as a redemption of the feminine…She is a balance against her sisters” |
Critic – cordelia saint | • Rubio – “Cordelia appears a sanctified woman” |
Cordelia holy | • “The holy water from her heavenly eyes”• “ample tear trilled down” |
Cord like Jesus | “Who redeems nature from the general curse” |
Queen | • “It seemed she was a queen/Over her passion” |
Critic feminist | • Cox asks “Is she a victim of patriarchy or a proto-feminist [early form of feminism]?” |
Feminist | such a tongue/As I am glad I have not” and “I cannot heave/My heart into my mouth””most rebel like/Sought to be king o’er her” – she refuses men to dominate her |
Critic – men control | “men control the expression and reception of her mourning” |
Patriarchy examples | “She’s there, and she is yours”, “now her price is fallen” |
Critic – fool feeling | • Bloom – “the true voices of our feeling” |
Critic – fool conscience | • Boas – “the voice of Lear’s conscience” |
Fool Lear madness | “Thou wouldst make a good fool” |
Critic – fool growth | the Fool “precipitates Lear’s growth |
Reverse roles fool | “I am a fool; thou art nothing” |
Critic – edgar protector | Edgar is the “disguised protector” |
Critic – edgar double | • Cunningham – “male double of Cordelia” |
Gloucester edgar good | “He cannot be such a monster” |
Edgar gods | saying “The gods are just” |
edgar suicide | “Men must endure/Their going hence…Ripeness is all” |
Edgar forgiveness | “Let’s exchange charity” |
Edgar justice | “most toad spotted traitor” and in Lear’s fake trial, he is the “most learned justicer” i.e. the judge and also Lear’s “philosopher” |
Edgar equality | “I am no less in blood than thou art” |
Kent slave | “did him service/Improper for a slave” |
Kent pawn | • “My life I never held but as a pawn/To wage against thy enemies” |
Kent death | “My master calls, and I must not say no” |
Kent out of line | “Be Kent unmannerly/When Lear is mad” and calls him “old man” |
Kent stoops | • “When power to flattery bows” and “When majesty stoops to folly” |
Kent touchstone | “Kent is a useful touchstone against which to test all the characters” |
kent point of reference | • Point of reference to judge Lear’s madness- Kent’s sanity vs Lear’s madness e.g. reminds audience that Poor Tom “hath no daughters” |
Kent goodness | “Kent is the nearest to perfect goodness.”/ |
Kent appearances | “I am much more/than my out-wall” |
Kent truth | when Lear asks who he is he replies “A man, Sir” |
King Lear
July 5, 2019