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RV 283 (Rh)

Now the dramatic effect of this passage is exactly, and doubtless intentionally, repeated in the curse pronounced against Goneril. This does not come after the daughters have openly and wholly turned against their father. Up to the moment of its utterance Goneril has done no more than to require him ‘a little to disquantity’ and reform his train of knights. Certainly her manner and spirit in making this demand are hateful, and probably her accusations against the knights are false; and we should expect from any father in Lear’s position passionate distress and indignation. But surely the famous words which form Lear’s immediate reply were meant to be nothing short of frightful:

The question is not whether Goneril deserves these appalling imprecations, but what they tell us about Lear. They show that, although he has