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<blockquote data-quote="primmiemoo" data-source="post: 5734480" data-attributes="member: 83588"><p>I studied King Lear for skool exams. The silly old buffer failed to notice the child who loved him best, and cut her out in favour of his other daughters who had cynically, entitledly, and greedily "kept in" with the old man.</p><p></p><p>The Law now permits appeals against Wills, which is how this thread was started, so, unlike in Shakespeare's day, there's an established framework to examine the various partys's (sp? Sorry, the internal spellchecker is on the blink) perceptions of a Will.</p><p></p><p>From what I understand, when a Will is made, it's made. A carefully detailed explanation for the reasoning behind it would make its acceptance easier should it be a potentially contentious matter, though.</p><p></p><p>Better still to sort it all out before the big D.?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="primmiemoo, post: 5734480, member: 83588"] I studied King Lear for skool exams. The silly old buffer failed to notice the child who loved him best, and cut her out in favour of his other daughters who had cynically, entitledly, and greedily "kept in" with the old man. The Law now permits appeals against Wills, which is how this thread was started, so, unlike in Shakespeare's day, there's an established framework to examine the various partys's (sp? Sorry, the internal spellchecker is on the blink) perceptions of a Will. From what I understand, when a Will is made, it's made. A carefully detailed explanation for the reasoning behind it would make its acceptance easier should it be a potentially contentious matter, though. Better still to sort it all out before the big D.? [/QUOTE]
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