Evaluation:
Published: 10.04.2004.
Language: English
Level: Secondary school
Literature: n/a
References: Not used
  • Essays 'Passage of the Storm in King Lear Act III', 1.
  • Essays 'Passage of the Storm in King Lear Act III', 2.
Extract

The techniques employed by William Shakespeare enhance a feeling of not only acrimonious irresolution but also of dithering misery. In shunning Cordelia, Lear generates a disruption in the great chain of being, causing both imbalance in his own mind and subsequent anguish upon himself. Feelings of both frustration with Lear and a sympathy for him inevitably come over the reader as they try to understand what Lear is suffering. Lear finds himself in a place of indecisiveness as he tries to decide the action to take in his tormenting situation. Vacillating between wanting to punish his daughters and desiring to forget about his circumstance, a tempest has begun to brew in his mind.
Shakespeare's use of both storm and animal imagery helps to develop the feeling of the unresolved desolation that Lear is suffering.…

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