Lear endures his going hence
Last scene of all, that ends this strange, eventful history
The conventional description of Lear in the final scene is that he is more
or less mad. On examination, though, he seems to do only rational and sensible things.
He kills Edmund's Captain in the act of hanging Cordelia.
LEAR I kill'd the slave that was
a-hanging thee. OFFICER 'Tis true, my lords, he did.
Note that, although the Captain has instructions to kill both Cordelia and
Lear he goes for the weaker Cordelia first. This seems strange. You would think
he would kill Lear first, knowing Lear to be a soldier of vast experience.
Perhaps Lear was asleep and Cordelia awake. Either Cordelia or the Captain might
have signalled, one to the other, not to wake him. If the Captain then quietly
entered the cell he might have suddenly seized Cordelia by the throat and hanged
her. The scuffle or a muffled scream might have woken Lear. Whatever the reason
Lear's spontaneous action shows his mental powers were intact. Presumably, he
grabbed the Captain's sword, the only weapon that was in the cell, and killed
the Captain.
Despite what the Officer said, neither he nor Edgar were eyewitnesses to Lear
killing the Captain. Recall that Edgar is asked to take Edmund's sword and run to
the prison. This is after the Edgar/Edmund duel and a very long time after the
Captain had set out for the prison. By the time Edgar has arranged for Lear's
release and the cell to be opened Lear has already killed the Captain and cut
Cordelia from the noose. The dead murderer on the ground shows the Officer, and
presumably Edgar, that only Lear could have killed him. If Lear has been quick
enough cutting down Cordelia she may still be alive. Lear's subsequent tests
suggest that he thinks there is some hope that she has survived. Edgar and the
Officer, unaware of this, and if ignorant that it takes time to die by hanging
may have assumed, rather than checked, that she was dead.
An interesting historical comparison is the method of execution called 'hanged,
drawn and quartered'. The victim was first hanged, then disembowelled and finally
chopped into pieces. A favorite pastime of executioners was to cut the victim
from the scaffold BEFORE death so that the victim would feel the agony as various
parts of his body were hacked away during the rough-and-ready butchery. Thus
hanging does not always result in death. A modern execution by hanging 'drops'
the victim thus snapping the neck-bone and causing instant death.
Of course, the stage direction leaves no doubt of Cordelia's fate: Enter
Lear with Cordelia dead in his arms. However, when we see the play acted
we know nothing of the stage direction. What we expect to see are human responses
to the events. Lear, with the apparently dead Cordelia in his arms, is accompanied
by Edgar and the Officer. Note that neither Edgar nor the Officer show any concern
for Cordelia's welfare, neither sending for a doctor nor trying to revive her,
believing that she is dead and so beyond help. Kent and Albany, also, do nothing
to try to save Cordelia and may well assume that she is dead when Edgar does nothing
for her.
Lear carries out a number of tests hoping to show that Cordelia is still alive,
and she may be if he has managed to cut her from the noose in time. His tests are
well known and quite sensible to detect shallow breathing in a dying or an
apparently dead person. They have been used in some folk cultures and are possibly
still performed in less-sophisticated societies. As a child I got to know that
the mirror (looking-glass) was a traditional method used in the back-
woods of Australia. I assume it came from Europe. Lear listened intently for
Cordelia's tiny voice which was ever soft, gentle and low. Nobody other
than Lear considers that Cordelia may be alive. To everybody else she appears to
be dead. To them, Lear's experiments would appear to be irrational, if it is true.
But that is the point: If it is true. Nothing is proven beyond doubt. When
Lear's earlier comments are examined they are not irrational. Only moments after
laying Cordelia on the ground he shows that his mind is clear:
LEAR Who are you? Mine eyes are not o'
the best:- I'll tell you straight. This is a dull sight Are you
not Kent? KENT The same. Your servant Kent.
A little later, after trying to explain his 'Caius' disguise,
Kent continues:
KENT All's cheerless, dark, and deadly:
Your eldest daughters have fordone themselves, And
desperately are dead. LEAR Ay, so I think. ALBANY He
knows not what he says, and vain is it, That we present us to
him. EDGAR Very bootless.
Albany's and Edgar's comments suggest Lear doesn't know what he says but Lear
actually responds quite sensibly under the circumstances. As far as Lear is
concerned Albany is the enemy. He lead the forces that defeated Cordelia's army.
Lear would believe that the orders to kill Cordelia came from Albany. Why would
he think otherwise? Suddenly Lear recognises the friendly face of Kent in the
enemy camp. Kent tries to explain his Caius disguise. Lear is puzzled but anyone
would be puzzled. How is Lear expected to know who are his enemies and who are
his friends? Albany obviously considers explaining why he was the enemy leader
fighting Cordelia but was actually a friend and that it was really his associate
who was the villain who had ordered Cordelia to be hanged. Albany may well
struggle to explain his ambivalence to himself, let alone Lear. He decides not
to present himself to Lear. Edgar, also, thinks it inappropriate to explain his
'Poor Tom' disguise. They realise that Lear could not possible handle the
overload of all these explanations on top of Kent's 'Caius' explanation while
Lear is at the moment engulfed in thinking about Cordelia.
Nor might Lear's remark, "Ay, so I think." be a mindless utterance,
but a thoughtful response to Kent's, "All's cheerless, dark, and deadly."
Albany certainly does not seem to think Lear is mad. He intends to resign his
absolute power back to Lear. 'Absolute power' is not something one would think
he would give to a madman.
ALBANY ..... for us, we will resign,
During the life of this old majesty, To him our absolute
power.
Albany's plan can never take effect because Lear dies. Note that Lear's death
evokes a response quite different to Cordelia's death. Edgar tries to revive
Lear until stopped by Kent. Edgar assumes Lear is alive but he assumes wrongly.
Earlier he had assumed Cordelia was dead, and did nothing. He may have assumed
that wrongly, too.
Lear is shown to be a heart-broken father mourning his child Cordelia.
What could be more human and natural? Almost no-one accepts the death of a loved
one with blunt, matter-of-fact logic. Anyone who has ever been through this
experience will know of the desperation and heroic measures to recover or
maintain a life even though it may be logically impossible to do so. After a
death there is often a non-acceptance of reality, particularly with the death
of one's child. This is not madness, this is normal human emotion in action. We
all go through such traumas at some stage in our lives. Lear is shattered by
Cordelia's death and his reaction is quite believable. It is that of a
broken-hearted father for his beloved daughter. No madman could react so.
It is human to grieve. It may not be logical but it is not madness. In
"Twelfth Night" is this passage:
CLOWN Good madonna, why mournst thou?
OLIVIA Good fool, for my brother's death. CLOWN I
think his soul is in hell, madonna. OLIVIA I know his soul is
in heaven, fool. CLOWN The more fool, madonna, to mourn for
your brother's soul, being in heaven. Take away the fool,
gentlemen.
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