Wednesday, September 18, 2019
The Theme of Justice in King Lear Essay -- Papers
The Theme of Justice in King Lear         Justice is a balance of misfortune and good fortune; right and wrong     according to motives and circumstances of the individuals under     judgement. To be just we must consider why they did it and balance out     all the evidence and facts and decide on a punishment depending on     these. Types of justice that exist in society include criminal     justice, legal justice, vigilante justice, natural justice and divine     justice.       As King Lear is a brutal play, filled with human cruelty and many     awful disasters, the play's terrible events raise an obvious question     for the characters, namely whether there is any possibility of justice     in the world.       Various characters offer their opinions. Towards the end of the play     Gloucester says:       "As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods; / they kill us for their     sport,"       Here, he has realized it is foolish for humankind to assume that the     natural world works in parallel with social or moral justice because     ultimately, the gods will do with us what they will regardless of     whether or not it is just. Edgar, on the other hand, insists that:     "the gods are just," optimistically believing that individuals must     ultimately get what they deserve. However, in the end, we are left     with only a terrifying uncertainty; although the wicked die, the good     die along with them, leaving us with the awful image of Lear cradling     Cordelia's body in his arms unable to accept the fact that she has     suffered such an inexplicable injustice. There is goodness in theworld     of the play, but there is also madness, evil and death, and it is     difficult to tell which triumphs in the end. The purpose o...              ...n are clever-or at least clever enough to     flatter their father in the play's opening scene-and, early in the     play, their bad behaviour toward Lear seems matched by his own pride     and temper. But any sympathy that the audience can muster for them     evaporates quickly, first when they turn their father out into the     storm at the end of Act II. Goneril and Regan are, in a sense,     personifications of evil-they have no conscience, only appetite. It is     this greedy ambition that enables them to crush all opposition and     make themselves mistresses of Britain. Ultimately, however, this same     appetite brings about their undoing. Their desire for power is     satisfied, but both harbour desires for Edmund, which destroys their     alliance and eventually leads them to destroy each another. Evil, the     play suggests, inevitably turns in on itself.                        
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