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King Lear | Why did Shakespeare insert the conflict between Goneril and Regan over Edmund?

In the last scene of the play, Goneril confesses to poisoning her sister Regan and then commits suicide herself. The crux of the conflict begins in Act IV, when a "love" affair emerges between Goneril and Edmund. At the same time, upon learning of the death of her brother-in-law Cornwall, Goneril immediately suspects that the widowed Regan will try to supplant her as Edmund's lover. In the first scene of Act V, Goneril's jealousy leads her to exclaim that she would rather lose the battle at hand than see her sister get Edmund. The insertion of this odd love triangle into the plot of King...

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