Act 4 Scene 3 Flashcards

(4 cards)

1
Q

sun rain

A
  1. 🗣 “Sunshine and rain at once, her smiles and tears” – Gentleman
    AO1: This poetic paradox captures Cordelia’s emotional complexity and moral sincerity.
    AO2: The juxtaposition of joy (“sunshine”) and grief (“rain”) uses pathetic fallacy and antithesis to elevate her to almost mythic status.
    AO3: In Jacobean society, women were expected to be emotionally reserved — this shows her as emotionally rich yet virtuous.
    AO4: Similar to Desdemona in Othello, Cordelia is presented as a tragic figure defined by deep, private feeling.
    AO5: Critics often read this as divine femininity; others see it as a romantic idealisation of passive female virtue.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

Cordelia crying

A
  1. 🗣 “As pearls from diamonds” – Gentleman
    AO1: The Gentleman continues to elevate Cordelia’s grief into something rare and beautiful.
    AO2: Chremamorphism (turning people into precious objects) — implies Cordelia’s sorrow is pure, valuable, even transcendent.
    AO3: Emphasises the tragic contrast between her virtue and the cruelty she faces.
    AO5: Some feminist critics argue this framing is reductive — turning Cordelia into a symbol rather than a real woman.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

crying

A
  1. 🗣 “Holy water from her heavenly eyes” – Gentleman
    AO1: Cordelia’s tears are not just emotional — they’re sanctified.
    AO2: Religious metaphor (“holy water,” “heavenly”) aligns her with divine forgiveness — a deus ex machina figure.
    AO3: This sanctification builds audience hope that she might restore order — she is the moral antidote to Lear’s chaos.
    AO5: Can be seen as Shakespeare offering divine redemption, but also as tragically ironic given her later death.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

shame

A

“Burning shame detains him from Cordelia.” – Lear (reported)
AO1: Lear’s shame is so intense that it physically and emotionally isolates him.
AO2: “Burning” shows how deeply internalised his guilt is — a shift from pride to painful self-awareness.
AO3: Reflects Lear’s movement into tragic recognition (anagnorisis).
AO5: Some critics argue this is true repentance; others say it’s still selfish — he’s ashamed of being seen, not what he did.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly