Tuesday, May 28, 2019

Shakespeares King Lear - Suffering of Cordelia in King Lear Essay

The tragedy of Shakespeares King Lear is made far more tragic and painful by the presence and suffering of the kings youngest daughter, Cordelia. go our sympathy for the king is somewhat restrained by his brutal cruelty towards others, there is nothing to dampen our emotional response to Cordelias suffering. Nothing, that is, at first glance. Harley Granville-Barker justifies her unreconcilable fate thus the tragic truth about life to the Shakespeare that wrote King Lear... includes its capricious cruelty. And what meeter sacrifice to this than Cordelia?5 Yet in another expiration Granville-Barker has come much closer to touching on the real explanation. I quote the passage at length.   It will be a fatal error to present Cordelia as a meek saint. She has more than a touch of her father in her. She is as proud as he is, and as obstinate, for entirely her sweetness and her offspring. And, being young, she answers uncalculatingly with pride to his pride even as later she answ ers with pity to his misery. To miss this likeness between the two is to miss Shakespeares first main(prenominal) dramatic effect the mighty old man and the frail child, confronted, and each unyielding... If age owes some tolerance to youth, it may be thought too that youth owes to age and fatherhood something more--and less--than the truth...6 Again he sums it up Pride unchecked in Lear has grown monstrous and diseased with his years. In her youth it shows unspoiled, it is in flower. that it is the same pride.7   As in his portrayal of Desdemona, here too Shakespeare has presented a woman of beauty and culture. Her demeanor is gentle and refined though not absent in strength or determination. Her emotions are deep, pure, loyal and e... ... speak When power to flattery bows? To plainness honours bound When majesty falls to folly. (I.i.144-8)   The immediate result is the establish for his own exile from the kingdom and his donning a disguise so that he may continue his service to Lear. It is noteworthy that none of the truly evil characters in the drama have yet taken a conscious initiative. Up to this point everything centers around the interaction of Lear, Cordelia and Kent and all the terrible sufferings which follow have their computer address in this encounter. To rightly comprehend King Lear, we must see the true significance of the court and the direct relationship between it and the tragedy that follows. We must ensnare the source of the great intensity and direction which finds expression in the action of the drama, and carries it to its inexorable conclusion.    

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