Explore Shakespeare’s presentation of the Fool in King Lear
Shakespeare uses the character of the Fool, who’s hired to entertain the king through a
comedic yet witty commentary, to explore themes of madness, power and disorder within the
play. The Fool, in his privileged position of existing outside the traditional bonds of social
order, offers a critical commentary on the actions of King Lear, serving as a vessel for
Shakespeare who offers his own criticisms of Jacobean society and the failing rule of King
James I. The dual nature of the Fool’s character, playing at times both the natural and
licensed fool, reflects Shakespeare’s own position as both entertainer and commentator.
Shakespeare uses the Fool to explore the theme of madness, as the Fool highlights both
Lear’s madness and the madness of the disorder which has consumed the kingdom. The Fool
shows the madness of Lear through satirical language and songs such as ‘then they for
sudden joy did weep, / And I for sorrow song, / That such a king would play bo-peep, / And
go the fools among’. Through the song, the Fool serves his role as a comedic entertainer, and
some productions mat use physical comedy here to emphasise that aspect of his role.
However, by associating Lear with other ‘fools’, the Fool criticises Lear for the madness of
his foolish decision to split up the kingdom. Gillian Woods claims that ‘his topsy-turvy
language suits the political and moral chaos’. Indeed, the ‘topsy-turvy’ nature of weeping for
joy and singing for sorrow highlights the chaotic disorder that has swept the kingdom as a
result of Lear’s developing madness. However, despite the appearance of being chaotic and
‘topsy-turvy’, these songs performed by the Fool are surprisingly insightful, providing clarity
to the audience and to Lear of the foolish decisions that he has made. The Fool’s role as a
judge in Lear’s mock trial of Goneril and Regan is symbolic of the wider madness that is now
ruling the world of the play; a world in which a fool becomes a ‘sapient sir’ and a king holds
a trial for a pair of stools. Shakespeare highlights the far-reaching consequences that one
man’s madness can have, especially in a position as important as the king. Perhaps this was to
serve as a subtle warning to King James to rule wisely, lest madness and disorder consume
the country. The Fool’s disappearance, after the line ‘And I shall go to bed at noon’, is in
itself symbolic. The Fool plays along with Lear’s madness, but offers one final insight that
foretells his own death, before disappearing. It could be argued that he is replaced by Poor
Tom, more of a natural fool to represent Lear’s descent into madness beyond reason, but