preview

Analyzing Carlton Hemingway's King Lear

Decent Essays

As the Learjet soared into the wide blue yonder, the iniquitous tempest that Carlton Hislop had created, over many years, were now gathering pace. Despite that, he was relieved to have left behind his troubles: for him, it was like changing from faded, worn-out clothes into something finely crafted; nevertheless, this simple allegory was basically false, for no matter how exceptional the cloth it could never truly hide the imperfections of the person wearing it. Even so, Carlton could now indulge to epicurean excess, as it naturally follows that people of that privileged class savor such delights without any feelings of guilt that would otherwise hinder the virtuous person with a certain degree of compunction. At any rate, the money that Carlton had embezzled was, according to him, compensation for having faithfully served the studio. And as he smoked his Cuban cigar – interspersed with moments of sipping cognac – which his scheming had given him, Carlton was, in essence, not fully sated by the accoutrements of wealth. What that dull ache …show more content…

Alas, he was too far gone to be moved to the point of saying, “I didn’t love you, Kathy. It was wrong not to have set you free. If I did, then you’d be married…perhaps with a couple of kids.” And as the past like his regret was doomed to oblivion, he could not help but shed a tear, yet his mild de profundis was greeted by me with skepticism, for what I observed of him was a person driven by his visceral desires, be it money or sexual perversion. Carlton Hislop was utterly incapable of anything remotely resembling empathy. Even so, I am sometimes mistaken so maybe he was adept in the art of social intercourse to feel these sentiments, at any rate, time will tell. What it divulges only the muse of creativity will inform the inept

Get Access