Sunday, August 4, 2019
King Lear Essay - Age versus Youth; Good versus Evil; Vision and Blindness :: King Lear essays
    Themes of Age versus Youth; Good versus  evil; Vision and      Blindness; and Fortune in King Lear           "The theme of King Lear may be stated in psychological as well      as biological terms. So put, it is the destructive, the ultimately suicidal      character of unregulated passion, its power to carry human nature back     to chaos....  The predestined end of unmastered passion is the suicide of      the species. That is the gospel according to King Lear. The play is in no      small measure an actual representation of that process. The murder-suicide      of Regan-Goneril is an example. But it is more than a picture of chaos and      impending doom. What is the remedy for chaos? it asks. What can      avert the doom? The characters who have mastered their passions give      us a glimpse of the answer to those questions."  -Harold C. Goddard,     The Meaning of Shakespeare, 1951           Good King, that must approve the common saw,     Thou out of heavens benediction com'st     To the warm sun     Approach, thou beacon to this under globe,      That by thy comfortable beams I may     Peruse this letter. Nothing almost sees miracles      But misery. I know 'tis from Cordelia      Who hath most fortunately been informed      Of my obscured course, and shall find time      From this enormous state, seeking to give      Losses their remedies. All weary and o'erwatched,      Take vantage heavy eyes, not to behold     This shameful lodging.     Fortune, goodnight. Smile once more; turn thy wheel.                 Shakespeare's tragedy, King Lear, is often thought of as not     only one of Shakespeare's best works, but also one of his best     "poems". The language follows in Shakespeare's trademark format      using iambic pentameter in much of the play. Shakespeare's It is well     known for its many universal themes. Some of these themes are:      Dealing with he folly of old age and the ingratitude of youth; Good versus     evil; Nature; Vision and blindness; and Fortune. These themes have      been examined for hundreds of years in many different forums, but what makes     this play so unique is the fact that Shakespeare incorporates all of these issues in just one tale.            One character that examines some of these issues is a character named Kent.      Kent is a significant character in King Lear, as he is involved from the      beginning to the end.  					  King Lear Essay - Age versus Youth; Good versus  Evil; Vision and Blindness  ::  King Lear essays      Themes of Age versus Youth; Good versus  evil; Vision and      Blindness; and Fortune in King Lear           "The theme of King Lear may be stated in psychological as well      as biological terms. So put, it is the destructive, the ultimately suicidal      character of unregulated passion, its power to carry human nature back     to chaos....  The predestined end of unmastered passion is the suicide of      the species. That is the gospel according to King Lear. The play is in no      small measure an actual representation of that process. The murder-suicide      of Regan-Goneril is an example. But it is more than a picture of chaos and      impending doom. What is the remedy for chaos? it asks. What can      avert the doom? The characters who have mastered their passions give      us a glimpse of the answer to those questions."  -Harold C. Goddard,     The Meaning of Shakespeare, 1951           Good King, that must approve the common saw,     Thou out of heavens benediction com'st     To the warm sun     Approach, thou beacon to this under globe,      That by thy comfortable beams I may     Peruse this letter. Nothing almost sees miracles      But misery. I know 'tis from Cordelia      Who hath most fortunately been informed      Of my obscured course, and shall find time      From this enormous state, seeking to give      Losses their remedies. All weary and o'erwatched,      Take vantage heavy eyes, not to behold     This shameful lodging.     Fortune, goodnight. Smile once more; turn thy wheel.                 Shakespeare's tragedy, King Lear, is often thought of as not     only one of Shakespeare's best works, but also one of his best     "poems". The language follows in Shakespeare's trademark format      using iambic pentameter in much of the play. Shakespeare's It is well     known for its many universal themes. Some of these themes are:      Dealing with he folly of old age and the ingratitude of youth; Good versus     evil; Nature; Vision and blindness; and Fortune. These themes have      been examined for hundreds of years in many different forums, but what makes     this play so unique is the fact that Shakespeare incorporates all of these issues in just one tale.            One character that examines some of these issues is a character named Kent.      Kent is a significant character in King Lear, as he is involved from the      beginning to the end.  					    
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.