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Authors: William Shakespeare

King Lear (37 page)

BOOK: King Lear
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Act 1 Scene 1

1.1
Location: the royal court, Britain

1
affected
favored

5
qualities … moiety
their qualities are so evenly balanced that the most careful scrutiny cannot distinguish between either man’s share

8
breeding
upbringing (plays on the sense of “conception”) charge cost (plays on the sense of “accusation, blame”)

9
brazed
made brazen, hardened

10
conceive
understand (Gloucester then plays on sense of “become pregnant”)

13
ere
before

14
fault
transgression/loss of scent during a hunt/vagina

15
undone
plays on the sense of “not copulated with” issue outcome/child

16
proper
handsome/worthy/rightful

17
by … law
legitimate

17
some
year about a year

18
dearer
more beloved (plays on the sense of “more expensive”)

18
account
estimation (plays on the financial sense)

21
whoreson
i.e. bastard (here used affectionately)

27
sue
entreat, seek

28
deserving
to be worthy of (your esteem)

29
out
away (perhaps abroad or in the house of another nobleman; it was common for a nobleman’s son to be educated in the house of another important family)

1.1
Sennet
trumpet call signaling a procession

1.1
bearing a coronet
carrying a small crown denoting inferior rank/wearing a wreath or garland about the head (must be of material that can be broken in half)

31
Attend
wait on, look after

34
darker
secret (with sinister connotations)

36
fast intent
firm intention

37
business
official duties/exertion/anxiety

39
son
i.e. son-in-law (like Albany)

41
constant will
unshakable intention

41
publish
proclaim, make public

42
several dowers
individual dowries

42
that
so that

45
sojourn
stay

48
Interest
possession

50
bounty
generosity/gift

51
nature … challenge
natural affection, combined with merit, makes a claim

53
wield
express

56
grace
virtue

58
makes breath poor
makes words insufficient/renders one breathless (in the attempt to express it)

58
unable
inadequate

59
all … much
i.e. all possible expressions of the amount of love

61
bounds
territories

62
shadowy
shady

62
champaigns riched
rich open countryside

63
wide-skirted meads
extensive meadows

67
self-mettle
same temperament/same substance (“metal”)

68
prize … worth
value myself in equal terms

69
deed
action, performance/bond, legal document

70
that
in that

72
square of sense
guiding principle governing the senses/(physical or mental) region of the senses

73
alone felicitate
only happy

77
ponderous
weighty

78
hereditary
by inheritance

80
validity
value

83
vines … Burgundy
Lear characterizes France and Burgundy by their assets: vineyards and cattle pastures

84
interessed
admitted, given a share

84
draw
attract/receive, collect/pull forth (as one “draws lots”)

92
bond
duty (with connotations both of a binding legal agreement and of restrictive shackles)

93
Mend
improve

94
mar
spoil

96
begot
conceived, fathered

96
bred
raised, brought up

101
plight
pledge, promise

106
untender
hard/cruel (plays on the sense of “not young”)

110
Hecate
Greek goddess of witchcraft and the moon

111
operation
movement and astrological influence

111
orbs
planets

114
Propinquity … blood
close ties of kinship

116
this
this time (or Lear gestures toward himself)

116
Scythian
person from Scythia, an ancient region extending over much of eastern Europe and Asiatic Russia, notorious for its barbarous inhabitants

117
generation
children/own people

117
messes
small groups of people who eat together/portions of food, meals/disgusting concoctions/troubled, confused conditions

119
neighboured
treated with hospitable kindness

120
sometime
former

121
liege
lord, one to whom feudal duty and service was owed

124
set my rest
stake everything (card-playing term)/repose, be at ease

125
kind
affectionate (in the manner of a family member)

125
nursery
care

125
avoid
leave

127
Who stirs?
Get on with it!/Why don’t you move?

129
digest
absorb, incorporate

130
plainness
frankness, plain speaking

130
marry her
be her dowry/get her a husband

132
large effects
extensive trappings

133
troop with
accompany

134
With reservation of
reserving the right to have (legal language)

135
sustained
maintained, supported

137
th’addition to
the title and honors of

137
sway
authority, rule

145
make … shaft
avoid the arrow (of my anger)

146
fork
barbed arrowhead

148
thou
kings are almost always addressed, respectfully, as “you”; Kent is
unmannerly
in his use of the familiar “thou”

151
Reserve thy state
retain your sovereignty

152
in … consideration
with wise and careful reflection

153
Answer … judgement
I’ll stake my life on my opinion

156
Reverb no hollowness
do not reverberate hollowly (i.e. emptily/insincerely)

158
held
regarded, valued

158
pawn
a pledge, surety

159
wage
deposit as security

163
blank
center of a target/line of sight (Kent asks to be the means to help Lear see better)

164
Apollo
Greek and Roman sun god

167
vassal
servant/wretch

167
Miscreant
villain (literally, “infidel, unbeliever”)

168
forbear
stop, desist

169
Kill … disease
i.e. Lear has got things the wrong way round

170
foul disease
loathsome, festering disease/syphilis

173
recreant
traitor

174
That
in that, since

175
durst
dared

175
strained
excessive/unnatural

176
sentences
pronouncements, decisions

177
nor … nor
neither … nor

177
place
status, rank

178
potency
power

178
made good
being carried into effect/shown to be valid/secured, defended

180
disasters
misfortunes

183
trunk
body

184
Jupiter
supreme Roman god

186
sith
since

190
your … approve
may your actions prove the truth of your grand statements

193
shape … course
behave in his usual manner

1.1
Flourish
trumpet fanfare signaling the arrival of an important person

197
rivalled
competed

197
in the least
at the lowest

198
present dower
immediately available dowry

202
tender
offer

204
hold her so
consider her to be
dear
(i.e. beloved/worth a great deal)

206
aught
anything

206
little seeming substance
insignificant (or physically small) thing/one who totally refuses to play a part

207
pieced
augmented, increased

208
fitly like
justly please

211
infirmities
deficiencies

211
owes
owns

213
Dowered with
given as a dowry

213
strangered
made a stranger, disowned

216
Election … up
choice is impossible

218
tell you
inform you of/enumerate

219
from … stray
stray so far from your love as

225
your object
your focus, the object of your sight (the apple of your eye)

226
argument
theme

226
balm
soothing ointment

227
trice
mere moment

228
monstrous
unnatural

228
dismantle
strip off (the
folds
of the metaphorical cloth of favor)

231
monsters it
it becomes monstrous

231
fore-vouched
previously sworn

232
Fall into taint
(must) come under suspicion

232
which … me
i.e. and to believe in all reason that she had committed such a monstrous offense would require a miracle

236
for
(your anger is) because

236
want
lack

237
purpose not
not intend to do what I say

239
foulness
wickedness/moral impurity

242
for which
i.e. for lack of which

BOOK: King Lear
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