King LearRandom House Publishing Group, 2009 M08 4 - 272 pages A king foolishly divides his kingdom between his scheming two oldest daughters and estranges himself from the daughter who loves him. So begins this profoundly moving and disturbing tragedy that, perhaps more than any other work in literature, challenges the notion of a coherent and just universe. The king and others pay dearly for their shortcomings–as madness, murder, and the anguish of insight and forgiveness that arrive too late combine to make this an all-embracing tragedy of evil and suffering. Each Edition Includes: • Comprehensive explanatory notes • Vivid introductions and the most up-to-date scholarship • Clear, modernized spelling and punctuation, enabling contemporary readers to understand the Elizabethan English • Completely updated, detailed bibliographies and performance histories • An interpretive essay on film adaptations of the play, along with an extensive filmography |
From inside the book
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Page x
... Lear , too long used to having his own way and hearing only the words of flat- terers , has blinded himself . Only when he has been stripped of the fine clothes and fine words of the court , has heard truth in the mouths of a fool and a ...
... Lear , too long used to having his own way and hearing only the words of flat- terers , has blinded himself . Only when he has been stripped of the fine clothes and fine words of the court , has heard truth in the mouths of a fool and a ...
Page xii
... Lear to enter with her in his arms already hanged . The gods have not defended her . Then Albany tries to give power back to Lear ... Fool , Kent disguised as Caius , Edgar disguised as Poor Tom and then as xii INTRODUCTION This Great Stage ...
... Lear to enter with her in his arms already hanged . The gods have not defended her . Then Albany tries to give power back to Lear ... Fool , Kent disguised as Caius , Edgar disguised as Poor Tom and then as xii INTRODUCTION This Great Stage ...
Page xiii
... Lear echoes the sentiment : " When we are born , we cry that we are come ... Lear's discovery . Erasmus ' Folly tells us that there are two kinds of ... Fool says that he would fain " learn to lie . " Lying is destructive in the ...
... Lear echoes the sentiment : " When we are born , we cry that we are come ... Lear's discovery . Erasmus ' Folly tells us that there are two kinds of ... Fool says that he would fain " learn to lie . " Lying is destructive in the ...
Page xiv
... Fool - has to learn to lie . At the beginning , she can only tell the truth ( hence her banishment ) , but later she lies beautifully and generously when Lear says that she has cause to do him wrong , and she replies , " No cause , no ...
... Fool - has to learn to lie . At the beginning , she can only tell the truth ( hence her banishment ) , but later she lies beautifully and generously when Lear says that she has cause to do him wrong , and she replies , " No cause , no ...
Page xv
... everyone is a player . Looked at in one way , the world of King Lear , with its images of doom , its mad king , scheming ugly sisters , its fool and its ( pretend ) mad Bedlam beggar , could not be further from ordinary INTRODUCTION XV.
... everyone is a player . Looked at in one way , the world of King Lear , with its images of doom , its mad king , scheming ugly sisters , its fool and its ( pretend ) mad Bedlam beggar , could not be further from ordinary INTRODUCTION XV.
Contents
Textual Notes | 122 |
ScenebyScene Analysis | 142 |
The RSC and Beyond | 156 |
Shakespeares Career in the Theater | 203 |
A Chronology | 218 |
References | 226 |
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Common terms and phrases
Act 4 Scene actor Adrian Noble Alack Albany Albany's Antony Antony Sher audience bastard beggar blind Brian Cox Burgundy Cordelia Corin Redgrave CORNWALL daughters death disguised dost Dover Duke Duke of Cornwall Edgar editors Edmund Enter Lear Exeunt Exit eyes father feel Following fortune France GENTLEMAN give gods Goneril Goneril and Regan grace hath heart human Ian McKellen Jonathan Bate KENT KENT LEAR King Lear kingdom knave LEAR FOOL LEAR KENT Lear's letter Lines look lord madam messenger Michael Gambon nature night nuncle performance Peter Brook pity played Lear poor Pray production Q corrected Q uncorrected Quarto text Regan role Royal Shakespeare Company running scene sense servant Shake Shakespeare sister speak speech stage storm tell theater thee there's thine things Tragedy traitor Trevor Nunn trumpet villain