3. King Lear
ï Aging father (patriarch)
ï Imperious
ï Tyrannical
ï Capricious
ï Aging father (patriarch)
ï gullible
Gloucester
Each sees his children through a distorted
lens, turning against the child who truly
loves him, unleashing in the others greed,
lust, ambition.
4. ï Aristotilian term
ï The error of the tragic protagonist
ï Does not have to be a character flaw, could be a
mistake or failure to take a particular action
5. ï Love, betrayal, revenge, loyalty, and foolishness
ï All things are not as they appear
ï Greed and lust for power corrupt human beings and
bring their downfall
ï Fate turns humans into playthings
ï Candor has a sharp edge
ï Advanced age and wisdom do not go hand in hand
ï Suffering can transform a contemptible human being
into a good person
7. - Lear: King of Britain
- His daughters
- Goneril
- Regan
- Cordelia
- Earl of Gloucester
- His sons
- Edmund (the illegitimate)
- Edgar
- Kent
- Cornwall
9. ï Earl of Gloucester introduces Edmund (illegitimate
son) to Earl of Kent, mentions legitimate son (Edgar).
ï King Lear intends to divide his power and kingdom
among his three daughters:
ï Goneril (married to Duke of Albany)
ï Regan (married toDuke of Cornwall)
ï Cordelia (intened to marry Duke of Burgundy)
ï demands they publicly profess their love for him
ï Cordelia refuses to put on a show; Goneril & Regan get
kingdom
ï Cordelia gets France, but is disinherited.
ï Earl of Kent banished upon arguing with Lear for his
treatment of Cordelia
10.
11. ï Edmund (illegitimate) decides to steal Edgarâs
(legitimate) inheritance.
ï Fools father (Gloucester) using a fake letter.
ï Fools Edgar as well.
12. ï Goneril -- bad daughter -- decides to humble her
father, orders Oswald to treat him badly.
13. ï The banished Earl of Kent arrives in disguise to
serve Lear
ï The fool enters and mocks the king for banishing
his good daughter and elevating his two bad ones
14. Original
Have more than thou showest,
Speak less than thou knowest
Lend less than thou owest,
Ride more than thou goest,
Learn more than thou trowest,
Set less than thou throwest,
Leave thy drink and thy whore
And keep in a door,
And thou shalt have more
Than two tens to a score.
Have more than you show,
Speak less than you know,
Lend less than you owe.
Ride more than you walk
Donât believe everything you hear,
Donât bet everything on one throw of
the dice,
Leave behind your booze and your
whore,
And stay indoors,
And youâll end up with more
Than two tens to a twenty
Modernized
15. Lear: Why no, boy. Nothing can be made out of nothing.
Act 1, Sc 1 to Cordelia: âNothing will come of nothing.â
The word nothing and the idea of ânothingnessâ becomes a
refrain throughout the play.
ï Latin: ex nihilo nihil fit
ï Existentialism - the idea that, although there is no
controlling force in the universe (i.e. no God), individuals
have the power to make their own destiny.
ï Nihilism - the rejection of all religious and moral
principles, often in the belief that life is meaningless.
16. Original
ï Thou madest thy daughters thy
mothers. For when thou gavest
them the rod, and pustâst down
thine own breeches
ï Thou hast pared thy wit oâ both
sides and left nothing iâthâ middle
ï I am a fool. Thou art nothing.
ï You made your daughters into your
mothers by given them all your
power. Thatâs when you gave them
the spanking paddle and pulled
your pants down.
ï When you gave away pieces of your
kingdom, itâs as if you cut off pieces
on both sides of your brain and left
nothing in the middle.
ï Iâm a fool and youâre nothing
Modernized
The Fool mocks the king for halving his kingdom
17. ï Goneril scolds Lear, demands halfing his men.
ï Lear decides to visit other daughter.
ï Albany protests Gonerilâs behavior, is silenced.
18. ï Goneril scolds Lear, demands halfing his men.
ï Lear realizes her ingratitude and begs the Gods to make her
sterile
âHow sharper than a serpentâs tooth it is to have a thankless
child.â
ï Laments that maybe Cordeliaâs flaw wasnât all that bad
âOh most small fault, how ugly didst thou in Cordelia showâ
ï Lear decides to stay with his other daughter
âWho I am sure is kind and comfortableâŠâ
ï Goneril sends Oswald with letter to Regan.
19. ï Lear sends Kent with
letter to Regan.
ï Fool again taunts his
master, Lear.
20. ï Edmund tricks Edgar into appearing -- in front of
Gloucester -- to fight.
ï Gloucester vows to legitimize Edmund and
capture/kill Edgar.
Concerning Edgar: âI never got himâ, meaning, âHe cannot truly
be my sonâ
Concerning Edmund: âLoyal and natural boyâŠâ, meaning: âMy
loyal and true sonâ
21. ï Regan and Cornwall arrive.
ï Edmund tells Regan that Edgar was friends with Learâs
rowdy knights
ï Cornwall and Regan are pleased with Edmund and
take him on as a servant/companion (similar to Kent
and Lear)
For you, Edmund, whose virtue and obedience doth this
instant so much comment itself, you shall be ours.
22. ï Outside Gloucesterâs castle, Kent beats Oswald.
ï Kent shows some of the stubbornness and
impetuousness that led King Lear to banish him in the
first place
ï Tyrannical Cornwall punishes Kent; Gloucester
protests weakly
ï âIâm sorry for thee friend, tis the dukeâs pleasure, whose
disposition, all the world well knows, will not be rubbed
nor stopped.
ï Kent ponders a letter from Cordelia, who knows of her
fatherâs situation and vows to find a way to fix things
23.
24. ï Edgar escapes capture
by hiding in a tree.
ï While hiding he learns
that he is to be killed.
ï Disguises himself as
Tom OâBedlam; a crazy,
disgusting beggar
ï His new name gives
him a new identity.
ï âAs Edgar, I am nothingâ
25. ï Lear and the Fool arrive at Gloucesterâs castle (seeking
Regan), sees Kent in stocks.
ï Learâs heart (literal)
ï âO, how this mother swells us toward my heart! Hysteria
passio, down, thou climbing sorrow.
ï O me, my heart, my rising heart! But down.
ï O Regan, she hath tied shar-toothed unkindness, like a
vulture, here. (indicates his heart)
ï Regan and Cornwall free Kent.
26. Original
Winterâs not gone yet, if the wild
geese fly that way.
Fathers that wear rags
Do make their children blind.
But fathers that bear bags
Shall see their children kind.
Fortune, that arrant whore
Neâer turns the key to thâ poor.
But for all this thou shalt have as
many doors for thy daughters as
thou canst tell in a year.
This story bodes more stormy
weather.
Father who wear rags
Make their children neglect them.
But fathers who are rich
Make their children kind.
Lady Luck is a fickle wore
And never gives the poor a break.
But despite all this, your daughters
will give you a lot of money-or do I
mean pain? âin the coming year.
Modernized
27. Original
That sir which serves and seeks for
gain,
And follows but for form,
Will pack when it begins to rain
And leave thee in the storm.
That gentleman who serves you
only for profit
And is only superficially loyal to
you
Will take off when it starts to rain
And leave you alone in the storm.
Modernized
28. ï Regan defends Gonerilâs actions; Goneril arrives; they
both demand he give up his retainers.
ï Lear rages into a storm followed by his Fool and
Gloucester.
29.
30. ï Kent discovers that Lear is madly in the storm.
ï Kent asks the gentleman to inform Cordelia, who as
arrived at Dover with a French army.
31. Original
Contending with the fretful elements.
Bids the winds blow the earth into the sea
Or swell the curlĂšd water 'bove the main,
That things might change or cease. Tears his
white hair,
Which the impetuous blasts, with eyeless
rage,
Catch in their fury and make nothing of.
Strives in his little world of man to outscorn
The to-and-froâconflicting wind and rain.
This nightâwherein the cub-drawn bear
would couch,
The lion and the belly-pinchĂšd wolf
Keep their fur dryâunbonneted he runs,
And bids what will take all.
Struggling with the wind and rain.
Heâs shouting at the wind to blow
the earth into the sea, or make the
sea flood the earthâhe wants to
see the world return to primal
chaos. He keeps tearing out his
white hair, which the blindly
raging winds catch up and blow
away into nothingness. Small but
brave in his surroundings, heâs
trying to stand up against the wind
and rain blowing back and forth.
Heâs running bareheaded, calling
for the end of the world, out there
on a night like this, when even
savage animals ravenous with
hunger crawl under cover and hide.
Modernized
32. ï Lear raves
ï In a moment of
lucidity he realizes he
is not acting
normally:
ï âMy wits begin to
turnâ
ï Kent arrives, takes
him to nearby shelter.
ï Fool predicts bad
things to happen.
33. ï Gloucester tells Edmund that Cornwall forbids him to
help Lear.
ï He confides in Edmund that he will help him anyway
and bids him to go to Cornwall to distract him so he
will not be aware that Gloucester is helping Lear
ï Edmund decides to inform on his father
This courtesy, forbid thee, shall the duke
Instantly know, and of that letter too.
This seems a fair deserving, and must draw
me
That which my father losesâno less than
all.
The younger rises when the old doth fall.
Iâll tell the duke right away that youâre going
to see the king, which is forbidden. And Iâll
tell him about the letter too. Youâll get what
you deserve, and Iâll be rewarded with
everything you loseâin other words, all
your lands. The young generation rises
while the old one falls.
34. ï Lear, Kent, and the Fool approach the shelter (hovel).
ï Fool goes in, comes out afraid of Tom OâBedlam
(Edgar).
ï Lear and Edgar commiserate.
ï Gloucester appears, offers shelter, warns Kent that
Regan and Goneril want to kill Lear.
35. Original
Thou art the thing itself.
Unaccommodated man is
no more but such a poor,
bare, forked animal as thou
art.â
Off, off, you lendings!
Come. Unbutton here.
(tears at his clothes)
Youâre the real thing.
The human being
unburdened by the trappings
of civilization is no more
than a poor, naked, two-
legged animal like you.
Off with these clothes
borrowed from animals! Let
me unbutton this. (he tears
at his clothes)
Modernized
36. Original
âWhat has his daughters
brough him to this pass?-
Couldst thou save
thingh?Wouldst thou give
âem all?â
Have his daughters made
him crazy like this?â
Couldnât you have kept
something for yourself?
Did you have to give them
everything?
Modernized
Projection?
38. ï Edmund reveals to Cornwall his father, Gloucesterâs,
dealing with French army.
ï Cornwall strips Gloucester of his title and gives it to
Edmund
ï Cornwall orders Gloucester to be arrested.
ï Cornwall puts even more trust in Edmund, taking him
on as his own son.
39.
40. ï Gloucester leaves them.
ï Lear acts out an imaginary trial of his daughters.
ï Gloucester returns with warning; Kent and Fool take
sleeping Lear away.
ï Edgar stays behind; he feels bad for the king, even
though he is suffering a similar bad situation.
Who alone suffers,
suffers most Iâ thâ mind
The person who suffers
alone suffers the most
41.
42.
43. ï Gloucester, arrested, is sent to Regan/Cornwall.
ï Cornwalls blinds Gloucester.
ï A loyal servant attacks Cornwall. The servant is killed.
ï Other servants take Gloucester to wandering madman
(Edgar) to escape.
45. ï Gloucester is led to
Edgar.
ï Edgar continues as
Tom OâBedlam,
agrees to lead
Gloucester to the
cliffs of Dover.
46. ï Oswald meets Goneril and Edmund.
ï Albany likes Cordeliaâs invasion, dislikes
Gloucesterâs situation.
ï Goneril sends Edmund to Cornwall to gather an
army; hints of plot against Albany.
ï Messenger arrives, tells of Cornwallâs death,
Gloucesterâs blinding.
ï Aside, Goneril is jealous of Regan about Edmund.
ï Aside, Albany vows revenge for Gloucester.
47. ï In Dover, the
gentleman tells Kent
about Cordeliaâs
reaction about Learâs
situation.
ï Kent says that Lear is
nearby but ashamed
to see his daughter,
Cordelia.
48. Original
It is the stars,
The stars above us, govern
our conditions.
Else one self mate and
mate could not beget
Such different issues.
It must be fate that makes
us who we areâotherwise
someone as good as
Cordelia could not possibly
be related to those two
witches.
Modernized
49. ï Cordelia orders a
search party for Lear.
ï Albany and
Cornwallâs armies
approach.
50. ï Oswald tells Regan that
Goneril convinced Albany
to fight Cordelia.
ï Letter from Goneril to
Edmund makes Regan
jealous; says that it makes
more sense for Edmund to
marry her now that her
husband is dead
ï Regan gives Oswald her
own token, tells him to kill
Gloucester for reward.
51. ï Edgar convinces Gloucester that he has jumped
and survived the cliffs at Dover.
ï Gloucester accepts his affliction.
ï Lear appears, raving.
ï Search party takes Lear to Cordelia.
ï Oswald appears, attacks Gloucester, is killed by
Edgar. While dying, gives letters to Edgar.
ï Letters (from Goneril for Edmund) propose
Albanyâs death and their marriage.
52.
53. ï Cordelia greets Lear.
ï Lear mistakes her for a spirit.
ï Kent and the gentleman talk about upcoming battle.
54. ï Regan corners Edmund about Goneril.
ï Edgar appears, in disguise, gives Albany letters;
proposes a challenger after the battle to
prove/disprove letters.
ï Edmund needs Albanyâs military leadership but
hopes he dies after battle.
ï Albany has proposed mercy, Edmund will not
allow it.
55. ï Edgar goes to fight in battle.
ï Fleeing soldiers, and Edgar, pass by Gloucester,
informing him of Cordelia and Learâs defeat and
capture.
ï Gloucester and Edgar flee.
56.
57. ï Edmund sends Cordelia and Lear to prison (with
orders to have them killed in an apparent murder-
suicide).
ï Albany, Regan, Goneril arrive.
ï Albany arrests Edmund and Goneril for treason.
ï Regan is poisoned, leaves.
58. ï Edgar appears in full armor, fights Edmund, who is
wounded.
ï Albany shows letter, Goneril leaves
ï Dying Edmund confesses.
ï Edgar reveals himself, tells of his revelation to
Gloucester, which shocked and killed him.
59. ï A report arrives that
Goneril poisoned Regan
and killed herself.
ï Soldier is sent to stop
Lear and Cordeliaâs
deaths.
ï Lear carries in Cordeliaâs
body, mad again.
ï Edmund dies.
60. ï Albany will return
kingdom to Lear.
ï Lear âseesâ Cordelia
breathing, then dies.
ï Albany orders funerals,
Kent and Edgar to assist
in ruling kingdom.
ï Kent predicts his own
death.
61. ï Aside â Private words that a character in a play speaks
to the audience or to another character and that are
not supposed to be overheard by others onstage. Stage
directions usually tell when a speech is an aside.
ï Soliloquy â A long speech in which a character who is
usually alone onstage expresses his or her private
thoughts or feelings.
ï Monologue â A long formal speech made by a
character in a play. A monologue may be directed at
another character or the audience.