Lear, the
aging king of Britain, decides to step down from the throne and divide his
kingdom evenly among his three daughters. First, however, he puts his daughters
through a test, asking each to tell him how much she loves him. Goneril and
Regan, Lear’s older daughters, give their father flattering answers.
But Cordelia,
Lear’s youngest and favorite daughter, remains silent, saying that she has no
words to describe how much she loves her father. Lear flies into a rage and
disowns Cordelia. The king of France, who has courted Cordelia, says that he
still wants to marry her even without her land, and she accompanies him to
France without her father’s blessing.
Lear
quickly learns that he made a bad decision. Goneril and Regan swiftly begin to
undermine the little authority that Lear still holds. Unable to believe that
his beloved daughters are betraying him, Lear slowly goes insane. He flees his
daughters’ houses to wander on a heath during a great thunderstorm, accompanied
by his Fool and by Kent, a loyal nobleman in disguise.
Meanwhile,
an elderly nobleman named Gloucester also experiences family problems. His
illegitimate son, Edmund,
tricks him into believing that his legitimate son, Edgar, is trying to kill
him. Fleeing the manhunt that his father has set for him, Edgar disguises
himself as a crazy beggar and calls himself “Poor Tom.” Like Lear, he heads out
onto the heath.
When the
loyal Gloucester realizes that Lear’s daughters have turned against their
father, he decides to help Lear in spite of the danger. Regan and her husband,
Cornwall, discover him helping Lear, accuse him of treason, blind him, and turn
him out to wander the countryside. He ends up being led by his disguised son,
Edgar, toward the city of Dover, where Lear has also been brought.
In Dover, a
French army lands as part of an invasion led by Cordelia in an effort to save
her father. Edmund apparently becomes romantically entangled with both Regan
and Goneril, whose husband, Albany, is increasingly sympathetic to Lear’s
cause. Goneril and Edmund conspire to kill Albany.
The
despairing Gloucester tries to commit suicide, but Edgar saves him by pulling
the strange trick of leading him off an imaginary cliff. Meanwhile, the English
troops reach Dover, and the English, led by Edmund, defeat the Cordelia-led
French. Lear and Cordelia are captured. In the climactic scene, Edgar duels
with and kills Edmund; we learn of the death of Gloucester; Goneril poisons
Regan out of jealousy over Edmund and then kills herself when her treachery is revealed
to Albany; Edmund’s betrayal of Cordelia leads to her needless execution in
prison; and Lear finally dies out of grief at Cordelia’s passing. Albany,
Edgar, and the elderly Kent are left to take care of the country under a cloud
of sorrow and regret.
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