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    King Lear Consequences

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    King Lear: Consequences of One Man’s Decisions Shakespeare’s tragedy King Lear is a detailed description of the consequences of one man’s decisions. This fictitious man is LearKing of England‚ who’s decisions greatly alter his life and the lives of those around him. As Lear bears the status of King he is‚ as one expects‚ a man of great power but sinfully he surrenders all of this power to his daughters as a reward for their demonstration of love towards him. This untimely abdication of

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    The Daughters of King Lear

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    The Daughters of King Lear In 1898 Edwin Austin Abbey painted a beautiful depiction of a scene in Shakespeare’s King Lear. The scene is of Cordelia leaving her sisters and all of court after her father‚ King Lear‚ divides his kingdom to her two elder sisters‚ Regan and Goneril‚ leaving her with nothing. This painting has been named many different names such as Cordelia’s Farewell‚ Scene from King Lear‚ and the most fitting‚ The Daughters of King Lear‚ so called in the Yale University organized

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    King Lear Revision

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    King Lear – Revision Male Potency Goneril’s emasculation of Albany in the first and final Acts‚ “milky gentleness…harmful mildness” [p.212 A1S4]; “[weak]-mannered man!” etc Elizabethan understanding of the word “nothing” which is so much repeated. It’s daughters not sons taking away Lear’s power. Old men‚ Lear and Gloucester. “I am ashamed…” [p209 A2S4]‚ Fool: “horns without a case” [A1S5] Goneril calling Lear’s knights a “rabble”‚ shows Lear to be an impotent leader. Thereafter‚ daughters take

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    Structure of King Lear

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    Shakespeare’s King Lear is a five-act tragedy. Most Elizabethan theatre adheres to the five-act structure‚ which corresponds to divisions in the action. The first act is the Exposition‚ in which the playwright sets forth the problem and introduces the main characters. In King Lear‚ Act I establishes the nature of the conflict between Cordelia and Lear‚ among Goneril and Regan and Lear‚ and between Gloucester and Edgar. This first act also establishes the duplicitous‚ or treacherously twofold‚

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    Paradoxes in King Lear

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    Shakespeare’s tragedy‚ King Lear‚ contains an abundance of paradoxes that present the protagonist of the title as a dynamic character with opposing traits. Lear embodies a loving authority figure and parent while at the same time being portrayed as a hateful‚ neglected individual with the demeanor of a child. The side of him which is most evident varies according to the situation he encounters‚ but each of these features is visible throughout the play. Initially‚ King Lear is shown as the powerful

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    King Lear: Suffering

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    King Lear: Suffering Suffering takes on many appearances‚ depending on how it is received. In King Lear‚ suffering was very painful to two people‚ and the giver wasn’t necessarily an enemy‚ pain can be from the ones you love. A storm isn’t something you wouldn’t think of when pain comes to mind‚ but it is an element and part of your environment‚ so are the people one deals with. Pain can come from many areas‚ both far and near. The enemies in our lives are their to balance the goodness that

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    In Shakespeare’s King Lear he argues that those in possession of wealth are invincible to the “lance of justice”. He depicts the poor unable to hide crimes and easily caught while those that are wealthy with status and power can twist justice to be unaffected by it. I agree with Shakespeare’s argument that the rich avoid justice while the poor are forced to take the entire punishment. Literature such as “A Young Person’s History of the United States” by Howard Zinn‚ and “Scarlet Letter” depict those

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    Nothing in King Lear

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    2007 One theme or leitmotiv of William Shakespeare’s play King Lear is “nothing.” The play can also be said to be about nothing because the events of the play either amounts to nothing or leaves the characters with nothing. In Act I‚ Scene I lines 87-89 we are introduced to this theme of nothing by the exchange between Lear and Cordelia: Cor: Nothing my lord. Lear: Nothing? Cor: Nothing Lear: Nothing will come of nothing. Lear says this and it actually turns out to be true for him because

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    King Lear Notes

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    Literary Devices “We two alone will sing like birds i’ th’ cage.” Said when Lear is trying to console the crying Cordelia when they are in prison Simile is present‚ evident through the usage of the word ‘like’ to relate the imprisoned Lear and Cordelia to birds singing in a cage These words reflect Lear’s central trait throughout the play: he is in denial of reality at every turn. Even now‚ in his madness and defeat he cannot face the harsh inevitability that neither he nor his daughter is

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    Treachery In King Lear

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    revealing not only about Edmund himself but also about other characters in the play who reason like Edmund. Discuss. It is apparent in the first two scenes of Act I that there are parallels between the treacheries of Gloucester’s family and that of King Lear’s. The key characters‚ Regan‚ Goneril and Edmund‚ suggest this parallel for the most part. Although Edmund’s motive is more complicated than the sisters’‚ they share several qualities in their acts of treachery. These qualities include their cleverness

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