King Lear Quotations Flashcards

1
Q

“Ha! Goneril with a white beard?” or “Look, look, a mouse! Peace, peace, this piece of toasted cheese will do ’t”

A
  • Lear experiences hallucinations on Dover cliffs
  • mistakes Gloucester for Goneril
  • Lear’s mental reality has become a material reality for him
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2
Q

What does E.A.J. Honigmann note about the cap, or “coxcomb”?

A
  • it is a symbol of the fool’s professionalism

specifically noted in the fool’s first introduction

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3
Q

What does Suzannah Lipscomb reflect on the portrait ‘The Family of Henry VIII’?

A
  • identifies the presence of William Somer (the king’s fool) who epitomises the fool’s employment to inject frivolity into the stoicism of a king’s life, liberating madness of a socially accepted form
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4
Q

“Dost thou call me fool, boy?”

(fool replies) “All thy other titles thou hast given away that thou wast born with”

A
  • Lear has selective autonomy over his political titles but the fool identifies that he holds an inescapably innate foolishness
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5
Q

“be Kent unmannerly/ When Lear is mad”

A
  • complicates the tenses between “when” and “is”

- implies a repeat performance of what Lear so often rehearses

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6
Q

“That lord that counsell’d thee/ To give away thy land…”

A
  • the fool reframes political advice through linguistic lunacy to which Lear is partially responsive, unpicking and inquiring of the fool’s meaning
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7
Q

“tears his white hair”

A
  • his bodily deconstruction indicates the redundancy of his material self due to the domination of his mind over his body, explaining why Lear agitates the storm into redundancy
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8
Q

“Now, by Apollo—“

“Now, by Apollo, King,/ Thou swear’st thy gods in vain”

A
  • Kent mocks Lear’s tawdry invocation to the gods
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9
Q

“…there’s hell,/ there’s darkness, there’s the sulphurous pit, burning,/ scalding, stench, consumption; fie, fie, fie! pah, pah!”

A
  • in the midst of his misogynistic polemic he cries out
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