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Authors: William Shakespeare

King Lear (43 page)

BOOK: King Lear
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Act 3 Scene 5

3.5
Location: the Earl of Gloucester’s residence

1
his
i.e. Gloucester’s

2
nature
natural familial affection

3
something fears
somewhat frightens

5
his
i.e. Gloucester’s

5
provoking … himself
Edgar’s sense of his own worth, provoked into action by Gloucester’s reprehensible badness/a provoking quality in Gloucester, which incited Edgar’s reprehensible wickedness

8
to be
of being

9
approves
proves

9
an intelligent party
a spy, an informer

17
apprehension
arrest

19
his suspicion
suspicion of Gloucester

Act 3 Scene 6

3.6
Location: unspecified; presumably an outbuilding on the Earl of Gloucester’s estate

2
piece out
supplement

5
impatience
anger/inability to bear suffering

6
Frateretto
the name of a devil; in Harsnett he is associated with a “fiddler,” which perhaps suggests Nero, the first-century Roman emperor who famously played the fiddle while Rome burned

6
angler
fisherman/thief

7
lake of darkness
presumably the Stygian lake of the classical underworld, but a phallic fishing rod and vaginal dark lake may also be implied; perhaps Nero’s murder of his own mother is glanced at—she reportedly asked to be stabbed in the womb as this was where her son had grown

10
yeoman
land owner below the rank of gentleman

12
to
as

13
mad
sense now shifts to “angry”

15
a thousand
i.e. a thousand devils

16
hizzing
hissing

16
’em
them i.e. Goneril and Regan; the Quarto text continues at this point with an imaginary “arraignment” of Goneril (see “Quarto Passages That Do Not Appear in the Folio,” p. 132)

21
mar my counterfeiting
spoil my pretense

23
Trey … Sweetheart
names for bitches—even his female dogs, he imagines, have turned against him; their names may suggest Lear’s daughters (“tray” can mean “pain, affliction,” “blanch” can mean “to deceive,” “to flatter”)

24
throw his head
unclear; presumably a threatening gesture of some sort

24
Avaunt
begone

25
or black or
either black or

26
poisons
i.e. with rabies

27
grim
fierce

28
brach
bitch

28
him
male

29
bobtail tyke
small dog with a tail that has been bobbed (cut short)

29
trundle-tail
dog with a long, curling tail

32
hatch
lower half of a divided door

33
Do … de
apparently the sound of chattering teeth again

33
Sessa!
cry of encouragement used in hunting or may derive from the French
cessez
(“stop”)

33
wakes
annual parish fairs (frequented by beggars)

34
horn
beggars carried drinking horns on strings round their necks

35
anatomize
dissect

37
entertain
employ

39
Persian
i.e. gorgeous, luxurious

41
curtains
Lear imagines that he is in a curtained bed

48
litter
vehicle containing a bed, here apparently drawn by horses

49
Dover
port on the south coast

54
to … conduct
i.e. hastily guide you to the necessary supplies for your journey

Act 3 Scene 7

3.7
Location: the Earl of Gloucester’s residence

1
Post
travel swiftly

7
sister
sister-in-law, i.e. Goneril

8
Advise
counsel, urge

9
duke
i.e. the Duke of Albany

9
festinate preparation
hasty preparation of troops

10
posts
messengers

11
intelligent
possessed of information

12
lord of Gloucester
Edmund’s new title (though when Oswald uses it, he refers to Edmund’s father)

17
questrists
seekers

18
the lord’s
i.e. Gloucester’s

25
Pinion him
bind his arms

26
pass … justice
issue a death sentence without a formal trial

28
do a court’sy
bow, yield

31
corky
withered, dry

3.7
plucks his beard
a highly insulting gesture

41
white
i.e. old, dignified

42
Naughty
wicked

43
ravish
seize forcibly, pluck

44
quicken
come to life

45
hospitable favours
welcoming (facial) features

46
ruffle
treat roughly/snatch

48
Be simple answered
answer straightforwardly

50
Late footed
recently landed

52
guessingly
without certain knowledge

54
opposed
i.e. to the dukes

59
charged at peril
commanded on peril of your life

61
tied to th’stake
like a bear in the popular sport of bear-baiting

61
stand
endure

61
course
designated bout, during which the bear was attacked by dogs

65
anointed
i.e. holy (having been anointed with holy oil at the coronation)

67
buoyed
swelled, risen

68
stellèd
starry

69
holp
helped

69
holp … rain
i.e. by weeping

70
stern
cruel, unyielding

71
turn the key
i.e. to let them in

72
All … subscribe
i.e. in such circumstances, all other cruel people would sanction a kind action

73
wingèd vengeance
i.e. vengeance of the gods

74
Fellows
servants

86
shake … quarrel
i.e. defy you (or “challenge you to a fight”) over this cause

86
What … mean?
What do you think you are doing?

87
villain
servant

88
chance of anger
risk of what anger may bring (in a fight)

91
mischief on him
injury done to him

95
sparks of nature
warmth of natural filial affection

96
quit
requite, avenge

97
Out
expression of impatience and disgust

99
overture
disclosure

101
abused
wronged, maligned

105
How look you?
How are you?

108
apace
rapidly

109
Untimely
at the wrong time (with war imminent)

3.7
Exeunt
here the Quarto text has an additional sequence in which loyal servants apply a palliative to Gloucester’s eye sockets (see “Quarto Passages That Do Not Appear in the Folio,” p. 134)

Act 4 Scene 1

4.1
Location: somewhere out in the open, not far from the Earl of Gloucester’s residence

1
thus
i.e. a beggar

1
contemned
despised

2
contemned and flattered
despised secretly though flattered to your face

4
esperance
hope

5
The … laughter
the most miserable kind of change is a decline in fortunes; when things are at their worst they can only get better

10
poorly led
led by a poor man/led in a way unsuitable to his status

12
But
were it not

12
mutations
changes/fickleness

13
Life … age
we would not accept old age

15
fourscore
eighty

18
Thee … hurt
i.e. you may be punished for helping me

22
means secure us
wealth gives us false security, overconfidence

22
mere defects
sheer deficiencies

23
Prove our commodities
turn out to be benefits

24
abusèd
deceived

31
is not
has not yet arrived

36
reason
rationality, sanity

41
wanton
unruly/cruelly mischievous

44
trade
course of action/practice

50
ancient love
old affection

54
plague
affliction

56
the rest
all

57
’pparel
apparel, clothing

58
Come … will
whatever may come of it

60
daub it
put on a false face, pretend

68
strokes
blows, afflictions

69
happier
more fortunate

70
superfluous
immoderate, extravagant, overindulgent

70
lust-dieted
fed solely by pleasure

71
slaves your ordinance
subjects your laws to his desires

72
feel
empathize, feel compassion (sense then shifts to “experience”)

72
quickly
soon/while he is alive/sharply

76
bending
overhanging

77
confinèd
channeled (between England and France)

78
brim
edge

80
about me
that I have on my person

Act 4 Scene 2

4.2
Location: outside Goneril and the Duke of Albany’s residence

1
my lord
i.e. Edmund

4
army
i.e. French army

8
‘sot’
fool

9
turned … out
turned inside out, got things the wrong way round (clothing metaphor)

13
cowish
cowardly

14
undertake
take action

15
tie … answer
oblige him to respond

15
on the way
i.e. that we expressed during the journey here

16
prove effects
be fulfilled

16
brother
brother-in-law, i.e. Cornwall

17
musters
gathering of troops

17
conduct his powers
escort his forces

18
change
exchange

18
distaff
spindle for weaving, common symbol of womanhood or wifeliness

20
like
likely

4.2
favor
love token

22
mistress
ruler/lover

24
thy
Goneril starts to use the more intimate pronoun to Edmund

24
spirits
plays on sense of “penis”

25
conceive
understand/imagine (with procreative connotations)

26
death
plays on sense of “orgasm”

29
services
sexual services

30
fool
i.e. Albany

30
usurps
wrongfully possesses

32
worth the whistle
worth looking for (from the proverb “it is a poor dog that is not worth the whistling”)

33
Goneril … face
the Quarto text has a longer dialogue in which Albany berates Goneril (see “Quarto Passages That Do Not Appear in the Folio,” p. 135)

34
rude
rough

36
Milk-livered
pale-livered, cowardly (cowardice was associated with lack of blood in the liver and milk with women)

38
discerning … suffering
that can distinguish between what may be honorably tolerated from what must not be endured

41
Proper … woman
deformity does not seem as abhorrent in a devil (to whom it is appropriate) as it does in a woman

43
vain
stupid/worthless

48
bred
brought up in his household

48
thrilled
pierced, moved

48
remorse
pity (for Gloucester)

49
Opposed
opposed himself

49
bending
aiming, directing

50
threat-enraged
enraged by the threat

53
after
i.e. to death

55
justices
(divine) judges

55
nether
earthly

56
venge
avenge, punish

63
all … life
demolish the dream (of having Edmund) that I have constructed, leaving me with the life I hate

65
tart
sour

69
back
going back

4.3
Location: the French camp, near Dover. The Quarto text precedes this scene with another one in which Kent and a Gentleman discuss the French king’s return to France and Cordelia’s concern for her father (see “Quarto Passages That Do Not Appear in the Folio,” pp. 137–39)

BOOK: King Lear
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