King Lear and Laurence Cook: Two of a Kind

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Although King Lear and Laurence Cook are from completely different eras, they are two of a kind. They both established impressive kingdoms, amassed large amounts of land, and achieved an elitist status in the process. Consumed with themselves and with the acquisition of material goods, they assumed that their ‘greatness’ would somehow render them infallible, and allow their children to perhaps become carbon copies of themselves. The reader knows that this is not the case, that the tale of these two fathers is a tragedy, and that their fortunes became their Achilles’ heel and that of their children. Not only does the plot line intertwine these two tragedies so intimately but so does the contrasting points of view, the theme of an oppressive patriarchal society, and the characterization of Lear, or Larry, himself. A major difference between King Lear and 1,000 Acres is the perspective from which the story is told and whom the reader places their sympathies with. King Lear is told from a predominantly male standpoint, with minor conversations between Regan and Goneril. In the story Lear is portrayed as a senile old man, whose wealth has managed to drive him to insanity. He decides to divide up his kingdom between his three daughters, two of whom end up collaborating against him and send him out into that infamous thunderstorm. It is at this point that the reader feels an incredible amount of sympathy for Lear. He has cast away the one daughter who loved him the most, and is being horribly mistreated by his other two offspring, whose only motives to ostracize him are their desires for wealth and power. 1,000 Acres, on the other hand, is told from a distinctively opposite point of view, that of Ginny Cook Smith, (Goneril) daughte...

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... the farm. Their arrogance corrupts their relationships with family and friends, who in turn fall from grace as well. For example, Pete becomes so fed up with Larry’s mistreatment that he attempts to physically harm him by tampering with his tractor. Unfortunately, it is not Larry who uses the tractor but Harold Clark, who is permanently blinded after getting the ammonia solution sprayed into his eyes. Their debauched behaviors essentially are the chain reactions to the destruction of the farm or kingdom, as well as the relationships between siblings, spouses, and friends. Another difference between the two is how they develop after being sent out into the thunderstorm. Lear realizes his insignificance in comparison to the natural forces of nature, and comes to cherish Cordelia. Larry on the other hand, curses his two daughters and ostracizes them until his death.

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