"There's a divinity that shapes our ends, rough hew them how we will." These words from
Hamlet are echoed, even more pessimistically, in Shakespeare's later play, The Tragedy
of King Lear where Gloucester says: "Like flies to wanton boys, are we to the gods, they
kill us for their sport". In Lear, the characters are subjected to the various tragedies
of life over and over again.
An abundance of cyclic imagery in Lear shows that good people are abused and wronged
regardless of their own noble deeds or intentions. Strapped to a wheel of fire, humans
suffer and endure, prosper and decline, their very existence imaged as a voyage out and a
return. The movement from childhood to age and back again, the many references to
fortune whose wheel spins humans downward even as it lifts, the abundance of natural
cycles which are seen as controlling experience, even perhaps the movement of play itself
from order to chaos to restoration of order to division again.
Throughout the text, the movements of celestial bodies are used to account for human
action and misfortune. Just as the stars in their courses are fixed in the skies, so do
the characters view their lives as caught in a pattern they have no power to change.
Lear sets the play in motion in banishing Cordelia when he swears "by all the operation
of the orbs from whom we exist and cease to be" that his decision "shall not be revoked".
How like the scene in Julius Caesar wherein Caesar says "For I am constant as the
Northern star" Lear vows to be resolute but dies regretting his decision at the hands
of his daughters who claim love him "more than word can wield" and are "alone felicitate"
in his presence.
That Edmund disbelieves in the influence of the stars adds to the play's recurring theme
that part of our fate is our character; that we choose our lot in life by how we choose
to act. Similarly, in Lear Gloucester's feelings predict what is to come when he says
"These late eclipses of the sun and moon portend no good..." And because of this
Gloucester begins to envision a world where "Love cools, friendship falls off, brothers
divide..." While his father misunderstands the importance of the celestial bodies, his
bastard son, Edmund denies the importance of the movements of the heavenly bodies. He
calls it "an excellent foppery" to "make guilty of our disasters the sun, the moon and
stars." (Just as in Julius Caesar we learn that "... The fault ... lies not in our
stars, but in ourselves "), Edmund in Lear echoes this sentiment when he says "as if we
were villains by necessity, fools by compulsion." But what he does not seem to see is
that by enacting his plot against his brother Edgar he fulfills Gloucester's prediction
and that "Machinations, hollowness, treachery, and all ruinous disorders" must be soon to
come. And we see in the play that these things do come to pass, not because of the
movements of the planets, but because of the flaws in human nature.
The stars are not the only things by which the characters believe their lives to be
governed. Characters throughout the play talk of the influence of fortune on their
lives. When Cordelia is banished, she has no "fortune", but is accepted by France.
Cordelia, with no wealth of her own suddenly in France's eyes she is "Most rich being
poor, most choice forsaken, most loved, despised" .
Edmund too, seems to have no fortune of his own. But this he attributes to mere luck,
and says that if all goes as he plans "The base shall top the legitimate, I grow, I
prosper" . After Gloucester's speech about the eclipses foretelling discord, Edmund
twists his father's words against Edgar when the bastard tells his brother "These
eclipses portend ... unnaturalness between child and parent, ...divisions in
state...banishment of friends ...and I know not what."
The first rise of fortune in the play is when Lear prepares to divide his kingdom among
his daughters. He puts them to the test, asking them how much they love him. The first
two daughters flatter the old king but Cordelia whose "love is richer then [her] tongue"
can only say that she loves her father as much as is her duty, no more nor less . When
her portion of the kingdom is divided between her sisters, the two of them plot to get
rid of the king, because he is "full of the changes of age...". Goneril suggests they
conspire against him ("...let's hit together..."), because she believes their fortunes
will be switched if they let him have any authority ("...if our father carry authority
with such dispositions as he bears, this last surrender of his will but offend us.").
Thus as Cordelia's fortune plummets -- so does Lear's, although he doesn't realise it at
first. Indeed, the only one who seems to realize the gravity of Lear's predicament is
his fool. The fool mocks Kent's devotion to the king, warning him to "Let go thy hold"
because Lear is "a great wheel which rolls down a hill" which will "break thy neck".
Kent's "fortune" rises and falls throughout the play. Before he defends Cordelia to her
father, he is an Earl. Then, he is banished and his lands are forfeit. Then, he returns
to Lear, incognito and offers his services to the king. Later, as he defends Lear's
honor, he is thrown into thrown into the stocks by Regan and Cornwall, and he pleads "
Fortune ... smile once more and turn thy wheel" While in the stocks, he says good night
to "fortune" and hopes for better luck the next day. He is released from the stocks
only to be cast out into a terrible tempest. Again fortune is arbirtary only to the
point to which
Gloucester's fortunes fall in the play too. He is betrayed by his bastard son Edmund.
For his loyalty to the king he is stripped of his title and his lands, his eyes are
ripped from their sockets, and he is thrown out "to smell his way to Dover". Ironically,
Gloucester, like Lear, is led by one whom he hates yet fails to recognize: his son Edgar.
Gloucester at the center of the play learns of Edmund's treachery when his eyes are put
out, and the fourth and fifth acts bring with them for him a descent into despair and an
achievement of hope and reconciliation. It is mainly in terms of this plot that the
time-honoured image of orderly reversal, the slow inexorable turning of the wheel, is
used as the dying Edmund says, "The wheel has come full circle". Edgar to whom he speaks
has concurrently risen to a share in the government of the island.
The Gloucester family, it seems, thinks in terms of the wheel-the natural course of
events, the cycle of nature, the wheel of fortune. Edgar sees not worldly fortune but
happiness and misery in the same image: "The lamentable change is from the best. The
worst returns to laughter." and again O world! But that thy strange mutations make us
hate thee, Life would not yield to age. A moment later, his blinded father appears
before him, Edgar exclaims: "The worst is not So long as we can say 'this is the worst'".
The wheel is greater than he had thought and in it's revolution has deeper yet to go.
Gloucester himself perhaps thinks of himself as falling from the wheel of fortune is that
grotesque act of despair (in the very presence of grace), in which he blesses Edgar as if
he were absent, and finds out in the most physical way on Dover cliff that he has nowhere
to fall or fall from but his son's care. 'Thy life's a miracle,' Edgar says, on two
levels of meaning, and Gloucester resolves:"Henceforth I'll bear Affliction till it do
cry out itself 'Enough, enough', and die". From that point affliction ends for him; for
him are Edgar's words spoken of a auspicious cycle:
"Men must endure Their going hence even as their coming hither:
Ripeness is all."
In the last scene of the play, however, Lear is is reunited with Cordelia. Although
the two are about to be taken to prison Lear swears his devotion to Cordelia by another
celestial globe. Comforting Cordellia, he says that he and she will watch the changes of
the court, see "Who's in, Who's out" but they will outlast the various "... great ones
that ebb and flow by the moon". In Lear, the death of hubris that gives rise to the
humility of love This is as much a cycle in most of literature, Lear included, as is
birth to death. In short death of the old precedes birth of the new. For Lear, it is a
death of self-ignorance that gives rise to the birth of self knowledge.
As the play progresses, it becomes more and more clear that all the smaller cycles point
towards a big one. This cycle's images are seen again and again throughout the play.
The images are those of "nurseries" and old men. Here "fathers are as wards to the sons"
and old men "Crawl towards death" like newborn babes. This is the aging cycle. It's
cyclic images show us King Lear reduced to the role of child, helpless and dependent on
his two wicked daughters.
Then as now, when Lear, the symbol for the oldest generation, gives his power to his
daughters (the younger generation) they immediately begin to treat him as if he were the
child and they the parents. Within the first month of his decision, Goneril has begun
to refer to him as being in his "dotage", that "old fools are babes again" Regan,
too after receiving her inheritance says [aside] of her father, "Tis the infirmity of
age:"
The relationship between the father and child is perverted in the Gloucester family , as
well just as Lear's daughters deceive him with good intentions, so too does Edmund
deceive his father. Edmund, stepping into his father's rights and title says 'the
younger rises when the old doth fall". Like Lear's daughters, Edmund conspires against
his father and his brother to steal his father's land and his brother's inheritance,
exclaiming: "let me if not by birth, have lands by wit."
As the play progresses, we see more and more images of Lear as a child rather than an
old man. In his daughter Goneril's house Lear's fool tells him he has "Made thy
daughters thy mothers" and that now he has only "that [he] was born with". Rather than
being obedient, Lear's children use their newly-won powers to make of him "an obedient
father". Lear quickly realizes this and his mistake. But having given away his power,
Lear is as helpless as a child. Perhaps Regan says it best when she says
"O sir, you are old,Nature in you stands on the very verge of his confine." You should be
ruled, and led."
Some people choose to live within the cycles in the world, some choose to deny them.
Those who choose to live within them are stretched out on the rack of the world. They
suffer for no reason and die needlessly. Those who deny them die too. But we see that
they have lived without virtue. King Lear begins the play acting more like a child than
a man, much less a king. As the play progresses and Lear's suffering increases, we see
him reaching out more and more to others. (stick in the virtue spiel) Necessity
changes the evil things into good ones, but we are witnessing a heavenlier transformation
in Lear's charitable concern for his fellow creature.People rebel against greed. The
stars aren't responsible for what happens to us. Luck doesn't cause good or bad things
to happen to us but the fault, the tragedy of human existence and even the brief moments
of love and beauty that we experience lie not in the stars but in ourselves. Rosalie
Colie said it best when she wrote "Lives lived w/out virtue aren't worth living."
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