Dissected Loyalty and Betrayal
Dissected Loyalty and Betrayal
Dissected Loyalty and Betrayal
Thomas Dunbabin
Word Count: 1282
Ideas
Loyalty
Differing views of loyalty explored in the actions of
characters
Betrayal
Familial betrayal
Lear and Gloucesters families falls apart
Reality and illusion
Recurring motif of sight
Descent into madness
An agent of beneficial change
Nature, order and religion
The divine right of Kings to rule
Lear loves power, order and control
Upsetting of natural order by striving for power
Edmond
Regan and Gonerill
The storm mirrors Lears descent into madness
Characterisation
Protagonists
Eponymous protagonist- King Lear
Lears Fool
Moral guidance
Lear remains loyal to Fool
Albany and Cornwall
Married to the two sisters
Violent, bad guys
Function of sexes
Men have all the power
Regan and Gonerill are strong characters
Their husbands have greater social standing
Context
Political
Jacobean Era
Primogeniture
Outrage at carving up kingdom
England moving towards cohesion of a single realm
Religious duty to keep realm intact
Historical
King Lear a mixture of myth and legend
Story told before Shakespeare was born
King Lear written around 1605
Several events at the time included father and daughters
Story of William Allen
Soliloquys
Antithesis
Nothing will come of nothing
have betrayed him, he is alone in this belief; it is really him who has
betrayed his own daughter. This is interesting when contrasted with
the relationship Lear has with his Fool. The Fool endlessly insults
Lear, but Lear is more loyal to him than to his own daughter. The
theme of familial betrayal is further explored through Edmond and
Gloucester. Gloucester is savagely betrayed by his son Edmond, who
is motivated by the deep sadness and the sense of inferiority that
being a bastard son brings. Edmonds deceitfulness and cunning is
second to none in King Lear, and he uses it to betray his brother and
father with the aim of gaining his fathers land, which he recognises
will bring him power. The dark extent of Edmonds betrayal is
explored through the soliloquys he gives; a compositional feature
that Shakespeare uses to broaden our understanding of his
character. One of these soliloquys highlights Edmonds total
awareness of the betrayal he is committing: That which my father
loses; no less than all: / The younger rises when the old doth fall.
(Shakespeare 107). Edmonds betrayal is not inadvertent, like Lears
betrayal of Cordelia, but is instead planned and orchestrated. This is
alike in nature to Regan and Gonerills planned betrayal of Lear, who
scheme to control him. Gonerill speaks to Regan: Pray you, let us
sit together. If our father carry authority / with such disposition as
he bears, this last surrender / of his will but offend us. (Shakespeare
19). The betrayals of Edmond, Regan and Gonerill explore the link
between betrayal and loyalty, as the people that they are betraying
are close family members- those to whom it is expected one should
have the most loyalty, and it makes the betrayals in King Lear even
more shocking to the audience.
The moral stance that Shakespeare assumes through King Lear is
clear. The tragedy influences its audience by giving its characters
endings they deserve, with the notable exceptions being Lears Fool
Works Cited