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Zusammenfassung

King Lear Summary and Analysis

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A complete synopsis of King Lear containing key quotes along with an in-depth technical analysis of literary techniques used by Shakespeare. A* level/rare analysis. Very thorough summary.

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Ja
Hochgeladen auf
19. märz 2024
Datei zuletzt aktualisiert am
26. märz 2024
Anzahl der Seiten
16
geschrieben in
2023/2024
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Zusammenfassung

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Inhaltsvorschau

King Lear

Act 1, Scene 1 (Lear’s Palace):

 “It appears not which of the dukes he values most” (Gloucester) - From the start,
Lear is portrayed as indecisive.
 Sennet - Exposes Lear’s initial authority.
 “Attend the lords of France and Burgundy, Gloucester” (Lear) “I shall, my liege” -
Obeyed instantly by Gloucester.
 Lear then explains his “darker purpose” - To divide the kingdom based on his
daughter’s love.
 “Unburthen’d crawl towards death” - Infantile image.
 “Which one of you shall we say doth love us most?” - Love is an abstract noun and
therefore immeasurable - Lear constantly attempts to measure the immeasurable
throughout the play.
 Goneril then professes her love, exaggerating - Using words that connote the theme
of measure - “More” “Dearer” “Beyond” “No less” and “As much”.
 “[Aside] What shall Cordelia speak? Love, and be silent.” - Cordelia is honest - Creates
a juxtaposition between private and public - Lear does everything in public, a matter
as significant as this should be done privately.
 Regan follows Goneril - Again exaggerating her love for her father.
 “Speak” - It is now Cordelia’s turn - Lear’s use of imperatives highlights his authority.
 “Nothing, my lord” - Cordelia refuses.
 “Nothing?”
 “Nothing.” - Cordelia refuses to play his game.
 “Nothing will come of nothing: speak again” - Stichomythia between Lear and
Cordelia is used by Shakespeare to create tension.
 Cordelia explains that she loves him “no more nor less” than one should love their
father - Tying into the repeated image of measure.
 “Why have my sisters husbands, if they say they love you all” - Cordelia attempted to
expose the mindlessness of the situation - Lear is blind to it.
 “For, by the sacred radiance of the sun, the mysteries of Hecate and the night, by all
the operation of the orbs from whom we do exist and cease to be, here I disclaim all
my paternal care… The barbarous Scythian” - Lear’s hamartia of uncontrollable anger
is exposed - King Lear is set in a Pagan setting, pre-Christian - Use of the personal
pronoun highlights his rage - Internal conflict.
 Kent attempts to calm Lear down.
 Lear replies: “Come not between a dragon and his wrath. I loved her most and
thought to set my rest on her kind nursery” - Lear compares himself to a dragon -
Foolish as in reality he is a weak, old man - The word “nursery” implies childishness -
Lear is immature.
 “Call France. Who stirs?” (Lear) - Conflict between authority and his identity.
 “Thy youngest daughter does not love you least” - Kent tries to inform Lear of the
truth - Lear refuses to understand - Hubris.
 Lear banishes Kent.
 Offers Cordelia to Burgundy but with no dowry.

,  “Now her price has fallen” (Lear) - Theme of measure - A paradox is created between
love and material wealth - Sees her in terms of wealth.
 France exposes the irony of the situation - She was Lear’s “best object” - How did she
go so quickly from most loved to most hated?
 “I am richer” - Cordelia is richer for not giving Lear what he wanted.
 “I am glad I am not (like her sisters)” - Very defiant.
 “I have sworn; I am firm” - Lear’s stubbornness - One of his flaws - Childish.
 “I shall not be his wife” - Cordelia’s assertiveness - Defies her role as a woman.
 “The jewels of our father, with wash’d eyes” (Cordelia) - Metaphor.
 “Prescribe not us our duty.” - Regan uses the royal pronoun - Power hungry nature.
 “Let your study be content your lord, who hath receiv’d you” Regan and Goneril’s
speech makes up one line of iambic pentameter.
 They speak in blank verse which makes them sound cold and honest - In contrast to
how they were before.

Act 1, Scene 2 (Gloucester’s Palace):

 Starts with Edmund’s soliloquy - He questions society with plosives “With base? With
baseness? Barstardy? Base, base?” - Referring to society branding him based on his
legitimateness. His jealousy of Edgar is exposed “Legitimate Edgar, I must have your
land”.
 The Law of Primogeniture - A system of inheritance in which a person's property
passes to their firstborn legitimate child upon their death - He wishes to have his
brother’s privilege.
 Edmund is a product of adultery - He is a product of sexual desire.
 Edmund manipulates Gloucester with the letter supposedly from Edgar - The letter
reflects the story of Lear “If our father would sleep till I wak’d him, you should enjoy
half his revenue forever”.
 Gloucester mirrors Lear by allowing himself to be so easily manipulated by his son.
 Gloucester is very superstitious - “These late eclipses in the sun and moon portend
no good to us… Love cools, friendship falls off, brothers divide” - Predicts the end of
social order - Predetermined fate.
 Edmund calls his father foolish “foppery” after he exits.
 Edgar enters - Edmund manipulates him - Dramatic irony.
 “I promise you, the effects he writes of succeed unhappily; as of unnaturalness
between the child and the parent; death, dearth, dissolutions of ancient amities;
divisions in state; menaces and maledictions against king and nobles; needless
diffidences, banishment of friends, dissipation of cohorts, nuptial breaches, and I
know what” - An astronomer predicted bad things - From “as” is removed in the Folio
version, perhaps to avoid political censorship.




Act 1, Scene 3 (Duke of Albany’s Palace):
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