preview

Love And True Love In Shakespeare's King Lear

Satisfactory Essays

In Shakespeare’s King Lear, we see many characters express their love for Lear through the sacrifices they make for him. Kent disguises himself as a slave for him; Cordelia goes to war for him; the fool goes out into the storm with him. Each of these acts is done purely out of love for King Lear, as none of these characters expect or ultimately receive anything in return. Additionally, we also see characters who pretend to love Lear for their own personal gain, like Goneril and Regan. But tragically, it is not until the end of the play, as he and Cordelia are about to die, that Lear realizes what it means to love someone and express that love in a genuine way and learns the difference between true love and selfish love. By the time of his death at the end of Act V, Lear learns that he spent his life desiring insincere love and his rejection of Cordelia’s sincere love leads to his demise. Cordelia and her sisters serve as an example of the juxtaposition between true love and false love in King Lear. The play begins with a test of love between Lear and his daughters. He asks them to make a case for who loves him the most. “Which of you shall we say doth love us most that we our largest bounty may extend where nature doth with merit challenge?” (1.1.51-53). The way that Lear invites love into his love is one that welcomes insincere love. He suggests that whoever loves him the most will be rewarded with the most land. Lear does not have the insight at this point to understand

Get Access