King Lear

King Lear

Dover Thrift Editions
by William Shakespeare
Publisher: Dover Publications
Mass market paperback, 118 pages
Price: $6.00

First performed about 1605, King Lear is one of the most relentlessly bleak of Shakespeare's tragedies. Probably written between Othello and Macbeth, when the playwright was at the peak of his tragic power, Lear's themes of filial ingratitude, injustice, and the meaninglessness of life in a seemingly indifferent universe are explored with unsurpassed power and depth.

The plot concerns a monarch betrayed by his daughters, robbed of his kingdom, descending into madness. Greed, treachery, and cruelty are rife and the denouement of the play is both brutal and heartbreaking. In fact so troubling is its vision of man's life that, until the mid-nineteenth century, the play was performed most often with a non-Shakespearean happy ending, with Lear back on his throne and Cordella, the daughter nearest his heart, happily married to the noble Edgar. But there is a dark magnificence to Shakespeare's original vision of the Lear story, and the play is performed today essentially as he wrote it, uncompromised by later "improvements." King Lear is reprinted here from an authoritative British edition, complete with explanatory footnotes.

 

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Summary: After the daughters he loves cheat him of his kingdom, King Lear descends into blindness and madness of operatic proportions.

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