Lear’s curse on Goneril (family)- visceral imagery | “Dry up in her organs of increase” |
Lear’s pain at the hands of his daughters (family)- soft w sounds grief | “Let not women’s weapons, water-drops, stain my man’s cheeks! No, you unnatural hags!” |
Kent about Goneril and Regan (family)- plosive alliteration | “Gave her dear rights to his dog-hearted daughters” |
Gentleman quoting Cordelia’s outrage (family)- sibilant alliteration | “Sisters, sisters, shame of ladies, sisters!” |
Lear on ungrateful children (family) | “How sharper than a serpent’s tooth it is to have a thankless child” |
Edgar’s disguise (appearance vs. reality)- plosive alliteration | “The country gives me proof and precedent of Bedlam beggars” |
Lear’s opinion on Cordelia’s speech (appearance vs. reality)- plosive -> contempt | “Let pride, which she calls plainness, marry her” |
Edmund harming himself to condemn Edgar (appearance vs. reality) | “Some blood drawn on me would beget opinion of my more fierce endeavour” |
Gloucester’s outrage at Edgar’s supposed betrayal (appearance vs. reality) | “Unnatural, detested, brutish villain- worse than brutish!” |
Kent pleading Lear to be reasonable (blindness) | “See better, Lear, and let me remain the true blank of thine eye” |
Goneril flattering Lear (blindness) | “Dearer than eyesight” |
Gloucester commenting on G+R’s cruelty (blindness) | “because I would not see thy cruel nails pluck out his poor old eyes” |
Gloucester naturalising Edmund (blindness) | “Loyal, natural boy” |
Edmund attempting to redeem himself (justice) | “Yet Edmund was beloved, some good I mean to do, despite of mine own nature” |
Gloucester about the meaning of death (justice)- metaphor | “As flies to wanton boys are we to th’gods; they kill us for their sport” |
Albany after Goneril’s suicide (justice) | “The judgement of the heavens that makes us tremble touches us not with pity” |
Goneril on Lear’s old age (old age) | “Old fools are babes again” |
Kent’s thoughts on new order (old age) | “I have seen better faces in my time than stands on any shoulder that I see at this instant” |
Regan commenting on Lear’s instability (old age) | “‘Tis the infirmity of his age…such unconstant starts are we like to have from him as this of Kent’s banishment” |
Edmund’s conclusion to bastardy monologue (ambition) | “I grow; I prosper. Now, Gods, stand up for bastards” |
Edmund’s reversal of the natural order (ambition) | “The younger rises when the old doth fall” |
Fool commenting on betrayal of Lear by his daughters (betrayal) | “The hedge-sparrow fed the cuckoo so long, that it’s had it head bit off by it young” |
Regan tells Gloucester Edmund betrayed him (betrayal) | “Thou call’st on him that hates thee. It was he that made the overthrow of thy treason to us” |
Edmund considering G+R (betrayal) | “To both these sisters I have sworn my love…neither can be enjoyed if both remain alive” |
Albany telling Edmund he’s worthless (nothing) | “I’ll make it on thy heart, ere I taste bread, thou are in nothing less” |
Lear when Cordelia dies (nothing) | “Thou’lt come no more, never, never, never, never, never” (nothingness, death) |
Lear mourning Fool/Cordelia’s death (love) | “And my poor fool is hanged” |
Cordelia’s love for Lear (love) | “I love your majesty according to my bond” |
Cordelia commenting on G+R’s love (love) | “Why have my sisters husbands if they say they love you all?” |
Lear on his and Cordelia’s imprisonment (love) | “We two alone will sing like birds i’th’cage” |
Kent’s loyalty to Lear (loyalty) | “If thou canst serve where thou dost stand condemned” |
Kent following Lear beyond the grave (loyalty)- rhyming couplet – end stopped | “My master calls me, I must not say no” |
Servant 1 after he mortally wounds Cornwall (loyalty) | “My Lord, you have one eye left to see some mischief on him” |
Fool providing Lear humorous counsel (loyalty)- guttural alliteration – thou | “Thou hadst little wit in thy bald crown when thou gav’st thy golden one away” |
Cordelia’s loyalty to Lear through imprisonment (loyalty)- Thee -> connotations of affection | “For thee, oppressed King, I am cast down” |
Albany likening Goneril to a devil (madness) | “Proper deformity shows not in the fiend so horrid as in woman” |
The state of Lear’s mind (madness)-fricative alliteration | “You sulphurous and thought-executing fires” |
Lear realising he is going mad (madness) | “My wits begin to turn” |
Edmund on his fate (nature) | “The wheel has come full circle” |
Edgar facing the storm (nature)- end stopped -> determination | “With presented nakedness outface the winds and persecutions of the sky” |
Edmund’s birth sign (nature) | “My nativity was under Ursa Major, so it follows I am rough and lecherous” |
Gloucester’s discomfort with the elements (nature) | “These late eclipses in the sun and moon portend no good to us” |
Lear’s prayer to nature (nature)- repetetion + aspirant -> desperation | “Hear, nature, hear, dear goddess, hear!” |
Lear’s reaction to the storm (nature) | “Blow winds and crack your cheeks! Rage! Blow!” |
Lear has gone mad, Cordelia describes appearance (authority vs. chaos) | “Crowned with rank fumiter and furrow weeds” |
Lear’s flattery (love)- enjambment | “Since now we will divest of us both of rule…territory, cares of state— which of you shall we say doth love us most” |
Lear’s description of women (nature)- semantic field of degeneration | “there’s hell, there’s darkness, there is the sulphurous pit; burning, scalding, stench, consumption” |
Final stage direction (nothing) | “Exeunt with a dead march” |
Lears deteriorating mental state (madness)- blank verse – two breaks in syntax caesura | “I shall have such revenges on you both that all the world shall- I shall do such things-“ |
Edgar as Poor Tom sinister remarks (madness)- four stress trochaic verse catalectic – Meter Shakespeare uses often for sinister characters such as the witches in Macbeth | “Be thy mouth or back or white, tooth that poisons if it bite” |
King Lear Character+Theme Quotes
July 1, 2019