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Act 1 Scene 1 King Lear

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Act 1 Scene 1 - Assignment No.

1
In the coming week – physical classroom (quiz no. 2)
Paper 3: compulsory passage based question
Tess essay based question- 57 chapters
 Why do you think Shakespeare begins the play with the
discussion between Gloucester and Kent?
 What are your first impressions of Lear?

 As a person?
 As a father?

 As a king?
 Why do you think Cordelia decides to say ‘nothing’ in
response to the challenge that Lear sets his daughters?
 How do you feel about?

 The way Kent responds to the king’s actions?


 The immediacy with which Lear banishes him from the
kingdom?

Act 1 Scene 1

King Lear opens with the Earl of Gloucester


introducing his illegitimate son Edmund to the
Earl of Kent, acknowledging that he loves this
son just as much as he loves his elder,
legitimate son, Edgar. 
 
When King Lear arrives he announces that he
wishes to divide his kingdom between his three
daughters, Goneril (married to the Duke of
Albany), Regan (married to the Duke of
Cornwall) and Cordelia (as yet unmarried) so
that they and their husbands can shoulder the
responsibilities of ruling Ancient Britain. On their
father’s disposal of his domains according to
the question, ‘Which of you shall we say doth
love us most?’, Goneril and Regan do not
hesitate to flatter their father and Lear shows
each on a map the land that will be hers. 
 
However, Cordelia refuses to play her father's
game. Uncompromisingly, she says simply that
she returns the love due to him as her father,
adding that she will divide her love between her
father and her future husband. Lear is furious,
disowns Cordelia and bestows his royal power
and possessions on her sisters and their
husbands, retaining only his title and a retinue
of one hundred knights. He intends to live one
month in turn with Goneril and Regan and their
husbands Albany and Cornwall, and he passes
his coronet to the men to share. When the loyal
Duke of Kent opposes this arrangement and
vouches for Cordelia, the King sends him into
exile.
 
Suitors for Cordelia’s hand in marriage, the
Duke of Burgundy and the King of France, are
summoned into the royal presence. When they
learn that Cordelia has been disowned of her
dowry, Burgundy is no longer interested but the
French king is undeterred and proposes
marriage to her.
……………………………………………………
Analysis
The play opens with a scene that introduces most of
the primary characters and establishes both the
main plot and a subplot. This first scene also is
important because it provides the audience with an
introduction to the character of Kent before he is
banished and before he reappears disguised as
Caius in Scene 4.
In the opening conversation, Gloucester speaks of
Edmund's illegitimate birth in what can be described
aptly as Elizabethan locker-room talk. Although
Gloucester loves his illegitimate son Edmund and
his legitimate son Edgar equally, Elizabethan society
does not regard the two men as equals. Edmund
realizes that his chances of a prosperous future are
limited because he was born second to Gloucester
from an unholy union. Edmund will not receive an
equal inheritance under laws of primogeniture, which
name the eldest son heir to his father's possessions.
Gloucester relates to Kent that Edmund has been
away seeking his fortune, but now he has returned
— perhaps believing that he can find his fortune at
home.
Initially, Lear appears to be a strong ruler, a
monarch who has decided to divide his kingdom.
Lear's choice will provide one clear benefit: Albany
and Cornwall will be in charge of the outlying areas
of his kingdom, which have not been easily
governed. Lear plans to place Cordelia, with himself
as her guest, in the center section. Lear recognizes
that he is growing older and explains his decision to
divide his kingdom by saying:
'tis our fast intent
To shake all cares and business from our age,
Conferring them on younger strengths, while we
Unburden'd crawl toward death. (I.1.37-40)
But the one benefit derived from this division creates
many problems. By delegating his royal authority to
his daughters, Lear creates chaos within his family
and his kingdom not unlike the civil distress
experienced by Shakespeare's audience. At the time
Shakespeare penned King Lear, the English had
survived years of civil war and division. Thus,
Shakespeare's Elizabethan audience would have
been horrified at Lear's decision to divide his
kingdom. The audience also would have questioned
Shakespeare's inclusion of the French suitor,
especially since Lear intends for Cordelia and her
new husband to oversee the choice of his kingdom.
The fear that a foreign king might weaken England
(and a Catholic monarch made it worse) would have
made Lear's actions seem even more irresponsible
to the audience. But Lear is doing more than
creating political and social chaos; he is also giving
his daughters complete responsibility for his
happiness, and he will blame them later when he is
not happy.
Moreover, the test that Lear devises to measure his
daughters' love is a huge mistake. Lear is depicted
as a wise ruler — he has, after all, held the country
together successfully for many years. Yet he lacks
the common sense or the ability to detect his older
daughters' falseness. This flaw in Lear leads the
audience to think him either mad or fool.
The love test is derived from Shakespeare's source
and so it is included. Shakespeare's primary source
is an anonymous play, The True Chronicle History of
King Leir, in which the love test is used to trick
Cordelia into marriage. Consequently, the test of
love is only a device to further the plot, which
Shakespeare plucked from his source. It is important
to remember that King Lear is not historically based,
although sources state that the story was based on
events occurring at about 800 B.C. King Lear should
more accurately be regarded as a sort of fairy tale.
In many ways, Goneril and Regan are similar to
Cinderella's evil older sisters.
Goneril and Regan's expressions of love are so
extreme that they are questionable as rational
responses to Lear's test. Cordelia's reply is honest,
but Lear cannot recognize honesty amid the flattery,
which he craves. Of course, Lear is not being honest
either when he asks Cordelia, "what can you say to
draw / A third more opulent than your sisters?"
(I.1.84-85). Lear plans to reward Cordelia's expected
exaltation with a larger portion of his kingdom than
that allotted to her sisters. The shares should be
equal, but Lear clearly loves Cordelia more.
Cordelia's reply, "Nothing," is a word that will
reappear throughout the play — with disastrous
connotations. "Nothing" is a key word that is
repeated several times in the play, thus emphasizing
the word's importance. Cordelia's uttering of
"nothing" is echoed at the end of the play when she
is dead, and "nothing" remains of her. But it is also
important to remember that Lear really understands
"nothing" about his daughters, just as Gloucester
knows "nothing" about his sons. When Gloucester
sees "nothing," he is finally able to see the truth, and
when Lear emerges from the "nothingness" of his
mental decline, it is to finally know that Cordelia has
always loved him.
Cordelia loves Lear according to the bonds of a
blood relationship, as paternity demands. Her
response is in keeping with Elizabethan social
norms, which expect a daughter to love her father
because that is the law of nature. According to
nature, man is part of a hierarchy, from God to king
to father to child. The love between each of these
parties is reciprocal, and Cordelia's love for her
father is what she owes him.
Cordelia tempers her love test reply with reason — a
simple, unembellished statement of the honor due a
father from his daughter. Lear irrationally responds
by denying Cordelia all affection and paternal care.
Kent's interference on Cordelia's behalf leads to
another outburst from Lear. Like Cordelia, Kent is
honest with the king, providing a voice of reason.
Kent sees Lear making a mistake and tells him so.
The depth of Lear's anger toward Kent suggests
excessive pride — Lear cannot be wrong. Cordelia's
answer injures Lear's pride; he needs her excessive
protestations of love to justify giving her the choicer
parcel of land. Lear's intense anger toward Kent also
suggests the fragility of the king's emotional state.
Cordelia's two suitors provide more drama in this
initial scene. The Duke of Burgundy cannot love
Cordelia without her dowry, but the King of France
points out that she is a prize as great as any dowry
and correctly recognizes that Burgundy is guilty of
selfish self-interest. France's reply to Cordelia
reveals that he is, indeed, worthy of Cordelia's love:
Fairest Cordelia, that art most rich, being poor,
Most choice, forsaken, and most lov'd, despis'd!
Thee and thy virtues here I seize upon,
Be it lawful I take up what's cast away. (I.1.249-252)
The final section of this scene reveals that Cordelia
knows that her sisters are liars, and so informs the
audience of their dishonesty. Goneril replies that
Cordelia deserves to be banished. This heated
exchange foreshadows the feud that develops over
the course of the next acts. Additional
foreshadowing is supplied by Goneril and Regan's
promise that if Lear becomes too much of a
nuisance, they will have to deal with him
accordingly. The first scene ends with Regan
acknowledging that Lear isn't just weak because of
old age, but that he has never really known himself
— or his daughters. Regan's complaint reveals
much about the relationship that Lear has with his
daughters. His obvious preference for Cordelia has
come at the expense of losing touch with his older
daughters. Lear cannot recognize Goneril and
Regan's deceit because he does not know them well
enough to recognize when they are being dishonest.
Lear's privileging of Cordelia prevents him from
forming the kind of relationship with his older
daughters that might have resulted in genuine love.
Scene 1 establishes a plot and subplot that will
focus on a set of fathers and their relationships with
their children. The audience will be privy to the
conflict between father and child, and to fathers
easily fooled by their children. Each father
demonstrates poor judgment by rejecting a good
child and trusting a dishonest child(ren). The actions
that follow illustrate just how correct Regan's words
will prove to be. It will soon be obvious how little
Lear knows and understands his daughters as
Goneril and Regan move to restrict both the size of
his retinue and his power.

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