King lear Motifs
Madness
Insanity occupies a central place
in the play and is associated with both disorder and hidden wisdom. The Fool,
who offers Lear insight in the early sections of the play, offers his counsel
in a seemingly mad babble. Later, when Lear himself goes mad, the
turmoil in his mind mirrors the chaos that has descended upon his kingdom.
At the same time, however, it also provides him with important wisdom by
reducing him to his bare humanity, stripped of all royal pretensions. Lear thus
learns humility. He is joined in his real madness by Edgar’s feigned insanity, which also contains nuggets of
wisdom for the king to mine. Meanwhile, Edgar’s time as a supposedly insane
beggar hardens him and prepares him to defeat Edmund at the close of the play.
Betrayal
Betrayals play a critical role in
the play and show the workings of wickedness in both the familial and political
realms—here, brothers betray brothers and children betray fathers. Goneril and
Regan’s betrayal of Lear raises them to power in Britain,
where Edmund, who has betrayed both Edgar and Gloucester, joins them. However, the play
suggests that betrayers inevitably turn on one another, showing how Goneril and
Regan fall out when they both become attracted to Edmund, and how their jealousies
of one another ultimately lead to mutual destruction. Additionally, it is
important to remember that the entire play is set in motion by Lear’s blind,
foolish betrayal of Cornelia’s love for him, which reinforces that at the heart
of every betrayal lies a skewed set of values.
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