The Tempest Guide, Meaning , Facts, Information and Description
The Tempest is one of William Shakespeare's last plays. It was performed for the first time on November 1, 1611 at Whitehall Palace in London.As a play The Tempest belong to the class of plays commonly grouped as his late romances. In these plays, Shakespeare show a concern with family ties and reconciliation in a typical myth-like or rarified setting.
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2 Criticisms and stage history 3 Influences 4 External links |
Plot
The sorcerer Prospero, former Duke of Milan, and his daughter, Miranda, have been stranded for sixteen years on the island, after Prospero's jealous brother deposed him and set him adrift with the newborn girl. Possessed of magic powers due to his great learning and prodigious library, Prospero is reluctantly served by a spirit, Ariel, whom he has rescued from imprisonment in a tree. Ariel was imprisoned by the African witch Sycorax, who had been exiled to the island years before and died before Prospero arrived. The witch's son Caliban, a deformed monster who was the only non-spiritual inhabitant before the arrival of Prospero, has been compelled by Prospero to serve as the sorcerer's servant, carrying wood and gathering pig nuts. Caliban, provoked by the comeliness of Miranda, has proposed to her that they join in sexual union in order to create a new race to populate the island.
The play opens as Prospero, having divined that his brother, Antonio, is on a ship passing close by the island, has raised a storm (the tempest of the title) which causes the ship to run aground. Also on the ship are Antonio's friend and fellow conspirator, King Alonso, and Alonso's son, Ferdinand. Prospero, by his spells, contrives to separate all the survivors of the wreck so that Alonso and Ferdinand believe one another dead. Caliban falls in with Stephano and Trinculo, two drunken crew members, whom he believes to have come from the moon, and drunkenly attempts to raise a rebellion against Prospero, but this fails. Meanwhile, Ferdinand, imprisoned by Prospero, falls in love with Miranda. Antonio conspires to kill the King of Naples, but is diverted by a pixie. All ends happily, as Prospero forgives his enemies and produces a magical masque to celebrate the union of Miranda with Ferdinand. This is the cue for one of the best-known speeches in Shakespeare, including the lines:
- Our revels now are ended. These our actors,
- As I foretold you, were all spirits and
- Are melted into air, into thin air:
- And, like the baseless fabric of this vision,
- The cloud-capp'd towers, the gorgeous palaces,
- The solemn temples, the great globe itself,
- Yea, all which it inherit, shall dissolve
- And, like this insubstantial pageant faded,
- Leave not a rack behind. We are such stuff
- As dreams are made on, and our little life
- Is rounded with a sleep. [. . .]
Some recent criticism of The Tempest has interpreted it in terms of colonialism; other readings of the play interpret it as a discourse on the nature of evil;
the tempest and the reference to the Bermoothes are seen by some as an early reference to the Bermuda Triangle.
The Tempest has inspired numerous later works, including short poems such as that by Robert Browning, and the long poem The Sea and the Mirror by W. H. Auden. The title of the novel Brave New World, by Aldous Huxley is also taken explicitly from this play. The 1956 science-fiction film Forbidden Planet is essentially a space-borne version of the play.
This is an Article on The Tempest. Page Contains Information, Facts Details or Explanation Guide About The Tempest Criticisms and stage history
Influences
External links
