King Lear Assignment
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King Lear Assignment
Betrayal, Reconciliation, Authority versus Chaos, and Justice are different issues or themes that Shakespeare presents to his audience and asks them to battle and wrestle against. The first issue is the betrayal of the king and of Gloucester, and the reconciliation between them and their loved ones in the end, and the authority versus the chaos in the city on England and finally the Justice issue in which both the bodies of the good and the bad lay next to the each other in the end of the play.
Shakespeare implies a parallel between the two themes of Blindness and Madness. The two characters who suffer the most in the play are Lear and Gloucester. Their stories are similar in many ways; however, while Lear slowly goes mad, Gloucester is blinded but remains sane. Lear and Gloucester both seem to be able to perceive certain things more clearly after they lose their faculties. Lear realizes only as he begins to go mad that Cordelia loves him and that Goneril and Regan are flatterers. He comes to understand the weakness of human nature at the same time when Gloucester comes to understand which son is really good and which is bad at the very moment of his blinding.
Betrayals play an important role in the play and show the workings of wickedness in both the familial and political realms. Brothers betray brothers and children betray fathers. Goneril and Regans betrayal of Lear raises them to power in Britain, where Edmund, who has betrayed both Edgar and Gloucester, joins them. Also Reconciliation has an important role between Lear and Cordelia as a dramatic personification of true, self-sacrificing love. Rather than hating Lear for banishing her, Cordelia remains devoted to her king and father who meanwhile, learns a cruel lesson in humility and eventually reaches the point where he can reunite joyfully with Cordelia. These two issues of betrayal and Reconciliation have a clear relevance to our world today where there are lots of betrayals and reconciliations between families.
King Lear wanted to divide the kingdom among his three daughters. He intended to give up the responsibilities of government and spend his old age visiting his children. He commanded his daughters to say which of them loved him the most, and promised to give the greatest share to that daughter. Lears two older daughters, Goneril and Regan, responded to his test, telling him in exaggerated terms that they loved him more than anything else. But Cordelia, Lears youngest (and favorite) daughter, refused to speak. When pressed, she says that she cannot “heave her heart into her mouth,” that she loves him exactly as much as a daughter should love her father, and that her sisters wouldnt have husbands if they loved their father as much as they say (I.i.90-91). In response to what she said the King gets mad at her and gives her nothing of the kingdom and takes his grace from her, and nearly banishes her.
King Lears two treacherous daughters, Goneril and Regan stripped him from his power which was symbolized in his hundred men that he wanted to keep with him all the time. First when he was living in Gonerils castle, she told him that his men were causing so much trouble and that she has already sent half of them away. The king after knowing this leaves her house and goes to his other daughter praying that she would be better than her other sister. But, he was shocked that Regan would not even allow fifty but only twenty five soldiers. Finally neither Goneril nor Regan allowed him to have any soldiers with him