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  1. Lear begs Goneril not to drive him mad. She can wait; he will be patient and stay with Regan, with his hundred knights. Regan, however, interjects that he should not make this assumption. Indeed, she thinks it is unsafe for him to keep as many as fifty followers in her household; she will allow him twenty-five.

  2. 21 kwi 2016 · At Gloucester’s castle, Lear is angered that his messenger has been stocked and further angered that Regan and Cornwall refuse to see him. When Goneril arrives, Lear quarrels bitterly with her and with Regan, who claim that he needs no attendants of his own.

  3. The Fool is angry at Goneril and Regan’s treatment of their father Lear. He comments here to Lear on how the natural family order has been reversed. Instead of being obedient daughters, they will turn Lear into an obedient father, as they now hold all the power.

  4. According to Regan, classical utilitarians value individuals in the wrong way: rather than valuing them directly, the utilitarians must value individuals merely as receptacles of what is valuable (i.e. pleasure). I demonstrate that Regan's argument is ineffective. I first show that

  5. 3 paź 2024 · What do you know about the character Regan in King Lear? Regan, the less evil second half to Goneril, is a master manipulator and deceiver in William Shakespeare's King Lear. She sycophantly ...

  6. Everything you need to know about Regan for the A Level English Literature AQA exam, totally free, with assessment questions, text & videos.

  7. The exact meaning of the following phrase in bold is not clear to me. In the first scene of King Lear, Regan utters these words to her father with flattery. I'm not sure but I think I read somewher...

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