13quotes

Quotes about king-lear

"King Lear," a timeless tragedy penned by the illustrious playwright William Shakespeare, delves into the profound themes of power, betrayal, and redemption. At its core, the play explores the complexities of human nature and the consequences of pride and folly. The narrative follows the aging King Lear as he grapples with the relinquishment of his kingdom and the unraveling of familial bonds, offering a poignant reflection on the fragility of authority and the depths of human emotion.

People are drawn to quotes from "King Lear" because they encapsulate the raw and universal truths about the human condition. The play's exploration of themes such as loyalty, madness, and the quest for identity resonates deeply with audiences, transcending time and culture. These quotes often serve as a mirror, reflecting our own struggles and triumphs, and providing insight into the intricate dance between power and vulnerability. Whether it's the heart-wrenching lament of a father betrayed or the piercing wisdom of a fool, the words from "King Lear" continue to captivate and inspire, offering a rich tapestry of language that speaks to the enduring complexities of life and the indomitable spirit of humanity.

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I will do such things,--What they are, yet I know not: but they shall beThe terrors of the earth.
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But the strength that remains, which is principally destructive, is the film's dialectical relationship to most of the other movies that we see, its capacity to make their most time-honored conventions seem tedious, shopworn, and unnecessary. This originality often seems to be driven by hatred and anger, emotions that are undervalued in more cowardly periods such as the present...
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With base? with baseness? bastardy? base, base?
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King Lear asked Gloucester: 'How do you see the world?' And Gloucester, who is blind, answered: 'I see it feelingly.' I see it feelingly.
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The king stood in a pool of blue light, unmoored.
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Nathan "N.R." Gaddis did not say ::2109 fellow Goodreaders [can’t be wrong] gave [King Lear] 1 star. Many call it boring. Some even say it is predictable and has no moral lesson. That these people have the right to vote and to procreate is frightening to me.
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To call an artist morbid because he deals with morbidity as his subject-matter is as silly as if one called Shakespeare mad because he wrote ‘King Lear.
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The leafless trees, with their black branches stretched hysterically in every direction, looked to him like illustrations of a central nervous system racked by disease: studies of human suffering anatomized against the winter sky.
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Thou, nature, art my goddess; to thy laws my services are bound...{His second motto, from King Lear by Shakespeare}
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Virgina Woolf versus Edward Lear.""Christ Alive," said Billy. "Are those my only choices?""I went for Lear," said Leon. "Partly out of fidelity to the letter L. Partly because given the choice between nonsense and boojy wittering you blatantly have to choose nonsense.
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