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1. A Climate of Hardened Hearts 1. A Climate of Hardened Hearts
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2. The Calculus of Need 2. The Calculus of Need
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3. Do Poor Tom Some Charity (187) 3. Do Poor Tom Some Charity (187)
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Bibliography Bibliography
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10 ‘As Full of Grief as Age’: Protesting against the Poor Law in King Lear
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Published:July 2017
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Abstract
This chapter situates King Lear in angry underclass responses to the recent Poor Law as revealed by the new social history. Revisiting the scene of Lear denied ‘raiment, bed and food’ by his disdainful and flinty-spirited daughters, it argues that this scanting of the geriatric at the gate, newly impotent and increasingly humiliated, enacts the familiar commons tragedy of the impoverished old man hectored by Overseers of the Poor, yet allocated little or nothing. Lear’s outcry ‘Allow not nature more than nature needs, / Man’s life is cheap as beast’s’ emerges as an impassioned rebuke to the spirit of hostile petty calculation practised by the prosperous of the parish and their officers. Revisiting Poor Tom, the chapter places him alongside eight traits of the vagrant persistently alleged by statutes and rogue literature, discovering that, created as a composite of refutations, Shakespeare’s Poor Tom is a serial exposé of government fatuity.
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