
Lear
Description
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King Lear is one of the most famous and compelling characters in literature. The aged, abused monarch?a man in his eighties, like Bloom himself?is at once the consummate figure of authority and the classic example of the fall from grace and widely agreed to be Shakespeare's most moving, tragic hero.
Award-winning writer and beloved professor Harold Bloom writes about Lear with wisdom, joy, exuberance, and compassion. He also explores his own personal relationship to the character: Just as we encounter one Anna Karenina or Jay Gatsby when we are seventeen and another when we are forty, Bloom writes about his shifting understanding?over the course of his own lifetime?of this endlessly compelling figure, so that the book also becomes an extraordinarily moving argument for literature as a path to and a measure of our humanity.
Bloom is mesmerizing in the classroom, wrestling with the often tragic choices Shakespeare's characters make. Now he brings that insight to his "measured, thoughtful assessment of a key play in the Shakespeare canon" (Kirkus Reviews). "Lear is a "short, superb book that has a depth of observation acquired from a lifetime of study" (Publishers Weekly).
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Content
- Intro
- Dedication
- Author's Note
- 1. Every Inch a King
- 2. Meantime We Shall Express Our Darker Purpose
- 3. Thou, Nature, Art My Goddess
- 4. Now Thou Art an O Without a Figure
- 5. O Let Me Not Be Mad, Not Mad, Sweet Heaven!
- 6. Poor Tom! / That's Something Yet: Edgar I Nothing Am
- 7. O Heavens! / if Yourselves Are Old, / Make It Your Cause
- 8. This Cold Night Will Turn Us All to Fools and Madmen
- 9. He Childed as I Fathered. / Tom, Away
- 10. He That Will Think to Live Till He Be Old, / Give Me Some Help!
- 11. But That Thy Strange Mutations Make Us Hate Thee, / Life Would Not Yield to Age
- 12. Humanity Must Perforce Prey on Itself, / Like Monsters of the Deep
- 13. O Ruined Piece of Nature, This Great World / Shall So Wear Out to Naught
- 14. Thou Art a Soul in Bliss, But I Am Bound / Upon a Wheel of Fire
- 15. Men Must Endure / Their Going Hence Even as Their Coming Hither. / Ripeness Is All
- 16. The Gods Are Just and of Our Pleasant Vices / Make Instruments to Plague Us
- 17. We That Are Young / Shall Never See So Much, nor Live So Long
- Acknowledgments
- About the Author
- Copyright
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