Downfall In King Lear

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After reading William Shakespeare’s King Lear, I believe that choice is the governing factor. King Lear, the main character, is lead to his downfall as a result of his own choices. These choices lead him to lose everything, which includes the lives of his daughter as well as his own. King Lear’s poor decisions are a result of his clouded judgment and arrogant attitude. Ironically, when Lear finally realizes his mistakes, it is too late to correct. King Lear was able to avoid his downfall had he made different choices, but unfortunately was blinded by his pride.

King Lear’s demise begins at the onset of the play when he decides to split his kingdom by quantifying his three daughters’ love. “Tell me, my daughters – [Since now we will divest …show more content…

The poor decision to banish the daughter that adores him most and give the kingdom to his disloyal daughters made him lose everything. As a result, at the end of the play, Lear is left regretting his handling of the situation with Cordelia. “This feather stirs. She lives. If it be so, / It is a chance which does redeem all sorrows / That ever I have felt” (5.3 319-321). Lear wants to make amends with Cordelia for all the wrongs that he has done, but it is too late because she is dead. In the Globe Theater Company’s performance of King Lear at the Broad Stage, King Lear is presented as silly and mentally unstable. With this presentation of Lear, it is made evident that he did not truly have the choice in determining his destiny, but was rather fated to have a downfall. Throughout the play, King Lear jovially runs across the stage, making irrational decisions and comments. The performance reveals that it was not his decisions that led to his demise and death, but rather his destiny that he could not …show more content…

Joseph Marcell as Lear conspires to divide his kingdom without any second thought of another way to pass down his empire. For Marcell, he must divvy his kingdom, for he is too old to control and make decisions. In addition, after Lear questions the love of his daughters, it seems as if Goneril and Regan have been preparing for that specific moment to make a grand profession of love. Just like at the end of the written play, the performance has Joseph Marcell regretfully holding Cordelia in his arms, while he half screams and half cries. Here, he realizes that he was doomed all along and it was his old age that brought him to the position that he is in. After watching the play, I believe that King Lear’s instability and inability to rationally make decisions correspond to his fated downfall and eventual

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