![]() ![]() He took the story from Sir Philip Sidney’s Arcadia, the most popular prose romance of the early Elizabethan period. ![]() The subplot of Gloucester and his sons was also added by Shakespeare. In the original (as in the revised versions of Shakespeare’s play that were performed in the eighteenth century), Leir and Cordella survive and live happily ever after. ![]() Shakespeare also turns the story into a tragedy. ![]() Cordelia (called ‘Cordella’) refuses her proposed husband, as well as declining to offer flattery to her father. In the old play, Leir requires his three daughters to marry suitors of his choosing to inherit his divided kingdom (though the question is also posed as to which of them loves him the most). Unlike the ur- Hamlet, King Leir survives, and so it is possible to appreciate the different approach Shakespeare took to the traditional story. The original King Leir, as it is spelled, had been popular about twenty years earlier. Finally, he dies of a broken heart, but a heart broken by joy, by his belief that Cordelia lives: ‘Look her lips,/Look there, look there!’ And just at the moment that he dies, the onlooker may presume, Lear wakes in heaven in Cordelia’s presence, and might say to her just as he woke from the torment of his madness: ‘Thou art a soul in bliss…’ (IV.vii.45).Īs with his other masterpiece, Hamlet, Shakespeare was reviving and rewriting an older play when he wrote King Lear. ![]()
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