King Lear
(Brief Story)
King Lear is an old king who wants to retire. He decides to
divide his kingdom among his three daughters: Goneril, Regan,
and Cordelia. To test their love, he asks each daughter to say how
much she loves him. Goneril and Regan lie and flatter him with big, fake
speeches. But Cordelia, the youngest and most honest, refuses to pretend. She
says, “I love you as much as a daughter should love
her father.”
King Lear gets angry and disowns Cordelia. He splits the kingdom between
Goneril and Regan and banishes Cordelia. A kind nobleman, the King of
France, marries Cordelia even though she has no riches.
Goneril and Regan show their true colours once they get power. They treat
Lear badly, reducing his servants and insulting him. Lear, heartbroken, leaves
their castles and wanders in a terrible storm. He slowly goes mad, shouting at
the thunder and crying about his mistakes. His loyal friend, the Fool,
and a nobleman named Kent (who disguises himself to stay with
Lear) try to protect him.
Meanwhile, another story unfolds. Earl of Gloucester, a friend
of Lear, has two sons: Edgar (good) and Edmund (evil).
Edmund tricks Gloucester into thinking Edgar wants to kill him. Edgar hides,
pretending to be a mad beggar called “Poor Tom.” Later,
Gloucester is punished by Regan and her cruel husband, the Duke of
Cornwall, who blinds him for helping Lear.
Edgar, still disguised as Poor Tom, finds his blind father and guides him.
Lear and Gloucester meet, both broken and sad, and talk about their regrets.
In the end, Cordelia returns with an army to save Lear. But Goneril and
Regan’s armies capture them. Edmund orders Cordelia to be killed. Lear finally
sees Goneril and Regan’s evil when they both die—Goneril poisons Regan and then
kills herself. Edmund is killed in a fight by Edgar.
Lear carries Cordelia’s body, crying, “Why should a dog, a horse, a rat
have life, and you no breath at all?” He dies of
grief. Only Edgar, Kent, and the Fool are left to rebuild the broken kingdom.
The lesson: King Lear teaches us about
family, pride, and lies. It shows how greed and cruelty destroy lives, but love
and honesty are precious. Even kings must learn to listen and forgive.
~~~~~
No comments:
Post a Comment