shakespeare

Welcome to my TempestNet! Thanks to my sponsor: All Shakespeare -- I have rotating features on the following 16 plays and sonnets! Check it out!

As You Like It
Antony and Cleopatra
Coriolanus
Hamlet
Henry IV
Julius Caesar
King Lear
Macbeth
Merchant of Venice
Midsummer Night's Dream
Much Ado About Nothing
Othello
Romeo and Juliet
Richard III
The Tempest
Twelfth Night
Sonnets

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This Month's Tempest Feature >>

What is human...

The overarching thematic issue that Shakespeare presents to us in The Tempest is the question of what is human. The subject surfaces prominently in the text. When Miranda first sees Ferdinand being led to Prospero's cell by the enchantments of Ariel she exclaims: "What, is't a spirit?/Lord, how it looks about! Be me ,sir,/It carries a brave form. But 'tis a spirit. (I, ii.ll.410-412). Immediately thereafter, Ferdinand responds to Prospero's false charge that he is a spy by saying, "No, as I am a man" (l.457). Shortly thereafter, while Ferdinand is charmed motionless after trying to resist the magician's plans to manacle him, Prospero says to his daughter:

Thou thinks't there is no more shapes as he, Having seen but him and Caliban. Foolish wench, To th' most of men this is a Caliban, And they to him are angels. (I, ii., ll.479-482).

 
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