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RV 275 (Rh) Is it not Shakespeare’s judgment on his kind that we hear in Lear’s appeal,

and Shakespeare’s judgment on the worth of existence that we hear in Lear’s agonised cry, ‘No, no, no life!’?

Beyond doubt, I think, some such feelings as these possess us, and, if we follow Shakespeare, ought to possess us, from time to time as we read King Lear. And some readers will go further and maintain that this is also the ultimate and total impression left by the tragedy. King Lear has been held to be profoundly ‘pessimistic’ in the full meaning of that word,—the record of a time when contempt and loathing for his kind had overmastered the poet’s soul, and in despair he pronounced man’s life to be simply hateful and hideous. And if we exclude the biographical part of this view, the rest may claim some support even