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lect. viii.
KING LEAR
313

are more tangible. He is frequently addressed as ‘boy.’ This is not decisive; but Lear’s first words to him, ‘How now, my pretty knave, how dost thou?’ are difficult to reconcile with the idea of his being a man, and the use of this phrase on his first entrance may show Shakespeare’s desire to prevent any mistake on the point. As a boy, too, he would be more strongly contrasted in the Storm-scenes with Edgar as well as with Lear; his faithfulness and courage would be even more heroic and touching; his devotion to Cordelia, and the consequent bitterness of some of his speeches to Lear, would be even more natural. Nor does he seem to show a knowledge of the world impossible to a quick-witted though not whole-witted lad who had lived at Court. The only serious obstacle to this view, I think, is the fact that he is not known to have been represented as a boy or youth till Macready produced King Lear.[1]

But even if this obstacle were serious and the Fool were imagined as a grown man, we may still insist that he must also be imagined as a timid, delicate and frail being, who on that account and from the expression of his face has a boyish look.[2] He pines away when Cordelia goes to France. Though he takes great liberties with his master he is frightened by Goneril, and becomes quite silent when the quarrel rises high. In the terrible scene between Lear and his two daughters and Cornwall (II. IV. 129–289), he says not a word; we have almost forgotten his presence when, at the topmost

  1. [This is no obstacle. There could hardly be a stage tradition hostile to his youth, since he does not appear in Tate’s version, which alone was acted during the century and a half before Macready’s production. I had forgotten this; and my memory must also have been at fault regarding an engraving to which I referred in the first edition. Both mistakes were pointed out by Mr. Archer.]
  2. In parts of what follows I am indebted to remarks by Cowden Clarke, quoted by Furness on I. iv. 91.