King Lear pursues the old convention in which the sense of entitlement causes people to exploit the adoration and trust of other people in their lives. In the realm of activity in King Lear, parity and symmetry in structure are clear. Lear's expulsion and exclusion of Cordelia are paralleled by his outcast of Kent, as well as by Gloucester's expulsion of Edgar. In King Lear the primary plot and the sub plot interlace so that you begin to think about whether both of Lear's daughter's, Goneril or Regan, or Gloucester’s child Edmund have any regard for their fathers. Do they truly love their dads, or are they falling into the trap of wanting what shouldn’t be theirs’s? At this point you have the two loyal children, Cordelia and Edgar, who are expelled from both of their father’s kingdoms. Cordelia and Edgar’s commitment to their dad in King Lear demonstrates an extraordinary amount of sensational incongruity. Cordelia and Edgar are ousted by their dads while Regan, Goneril and Edmund sense of entitlement causes them to plan to toss their dads out of their powerful positions.
In the primary plot Lear requests that his little girls affirm their affection for him. The initial two, Goneril and Regan, expand on the affection they share for their dad. Goneril proceeds to reveal to her dad, “I love you more than words can wield the matter; dearer than eye sight, space, and liberty.” obviously Lear accepts this as an extraordinary compliment. His second little girl Regan at that point proceeds to state, “Sir, I am made of the self-same mental that my sister is, and prize me at her worth. In my true heart I find she names my very deed of love” (1.1, 56-57, 70-73). After Lear hears his two oldest little girls announce their incredible love for their dad he expects extraordinary words from his most loved girl Cordelia. An excess of dishearten of her dad the main word from Cordelia's mouth is, "Nothing"(1.1, 89). Lear is astounded by the response of Cordelia. Cordelia clarifies that she can add nothing to what her more manipulative sisters have said. Cordelia declines to go beyond her heart, she adores her dad, but she doesn’t share the same expectations her sisters have about what they are entitled to. Throughout the play Cordelia never laments from her initial feelings, however to the end puts the fault on her sisters. Lear anticipates that Cordelia will stun everybody with her expressions of energy that she feels for him and rather says, "Nothing." Lear is so shaken up and irate by Cordelia's reaction that he expels her. In the fog of everything going on Kent, Lear's correct hand man, attempts to re-establish Cordelia. Shockingly Lear does not mess with Kent's words and he is additionally exiled.
In the sub plot we have a comparative circumstance happening. Edmund, the bastard son of Gloucester, is concocting a plan to set his dad against Edgar, Gloucester's legitimate son. Edmund gives Gloucester a fake letter in which Edgar plans to enroll Edmund int...