King Lear- I am a man more sinned
To read all this essay and more Visit Coursework.info
Below is a short sample of the document. Visit Coursework.info for the full version.
Goneril and Regan's true colours show when Lear comes to visit them and is cast out into the storm with the reply, "This house is little/the old man and's people cannot be well bestowed."
Lear is demoralised and his mental health is fast deteriorating only his two loyal servants stay with him the fool and Kent. In this storm he confesses that he is a man more sinned against than sinning and that this storm will reveal the sinners. Here we see him at his most exposed, he is at the bottom of the wheel of fortune as he roams the wilderness waiting for fortune to smile once more. Lear's sins are primarily characterial sins an ...
