Not Peer Reviewed
- Edition: King Lear
 
King Lear (Modern, Quarto)
- Introduction
 - Texts of this edition
 - Contextual materials
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- Holinshed on King Lear
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- The History of King Leir
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- Albion's England (Selection)
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- Hardyng's Chronicle (Selection)
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- Kings of Britain
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- Chronicles of England
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- Faerie Queene
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- The Mirror for Magistrates
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- The Arcadia
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- A Declaration of Egregious Popish Impostures
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- Aristotle on tragedy
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- The Book of Job (Selections)
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- The Monk's Tale (Selections)
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- The Defense of Poetry
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- The First Blast of the Trumpet
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- Basilicon Doron
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- On Bastards
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- On Aging
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- King Lear (Adapted by Nahum Tate)
  
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 - Facsimiles
 
 Welcome, my lord. I marvel our mild husband
  Now, where's your master?
 Madam, within, but never man so changed.
  [To the Bastard] Then shall you go no further.
 16.20.1[Gives him a favor of some kind.]
 16.22.1[She kisses him.]
  This kiss, if it durst speak,
 Yours in the ranks of death.
 16.25.1[Exit.]
  My most dear Gloucester.
 Madam, here comes my lord.
 16.28.1Exit [Oswald the] steward.
 I have been worth the whistling.
  O Goneril,
 No more, the text is foolish.
 Wisdom and goodness to the vile seem vile.
  Milk-livered man,
 16.55France spreads his banners in our noiseless land,
  See thyself, devil.
  O vain fool!
 Thou changèd, and self-covered thing, for shame,
 Marry, your manhood?--mew!
 What news?
 O my good lord, the Duke of Cornwall's dead,
  Gloucester's eyes?
 A servant that he bred, thralled with remorse,
 This shows you are above, 2324you justicers,
 Both, both, my lord. 2328[To Goneril] This letter, madam, craves
 [Aside] One way I like this well;
 16.87.1Exit [Goneril].
 Where was his son 2336when they did take his eyes?
 Come with my lady hither.
 2338Albany
  He is not here?
 No, my good lord, I met him back again.
 Knows he the wickedness?
 Ay, my good lord, 'twas he informed against him,
  Gloucester, I live