Tuesday, August 20, 2019
King Lear :: Essays Papers
King Lear    There are really two plots in King Lear, a main plot and a fully  developed subplot.  Each has its own set of characters.     In the main plot, there is the head of the family, the  80-plus-year-old king of Britain, Lear.  He has three daughters,  Goneril, Regan, and Cordelia.  The Duke of Albany is married to  the oldest, Goneril, and the Duke of Cornwall is married to  Regan, the middle daughter.  Cordelia has two suitors, the Duke  of Burgundy and the King of France.  The court jester, the Fool,  is by extension a member of the Lear family and part of the main  plot, as is the Earl of Kent, Lear's loyal follower.     The Earl of Gloucester, also a member of Lear's court, is the  head of another family and the focus of the subplot.  He has two  offspring, an older, legitimate son named Edgar and a younger,  illegitimate or bastard son named Edmund.     Various minor characters appear from time to time.  They are  easily identified by their connections with whatever main  character they serve or speak of.     As the play opens, Lear has decided to retire and divide his  kingdom among his three daughters.  Cordelia's husband will be  chosen for her immediately after Lear executes this "living  will." Before he allots the shares, Lear asks each daughter to  make a profession of her love for him in order to receive her  entitlement.  Goneril and Regan waste no time professing love  for their father, but Cordelia is speechless.  She loves her  father as any daughter should, no more and no less.  Lear is  outraged by what he sees as her lack of devotion.  He cuts  Cordelia out of her share and banishes her.  Her share is  divided between Goneril and Regan.  Lear gives them everything  but keeps a retinue, a following of 100 knights who will  accompany him as he alternates monthly visits between his two  daughters.  Cordelia's suitors are called in.  Without a dowry,  Burgundy rejects her; but the King of France sees her true worth  and leads Cordelia off to marriage and his protection.     At Gloucester's castle, Edmund reveals that he will not let his  illegitimate birth and older brother prevent him from inheriting  his father's estate.  He devises a plan to convince Gloucester  that Edgar is secretly planning to kill his father to get his  hands on the family property and enjoy it while he's still  young.  Edmund then tells Edgar that their father is after him  for some mistaken notion of a reported crime.  					    
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