The Tempest — William Shakespeare
"We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep."
1. The Play at a Glance
The Tempest (c. 1611) is widely believed to be Shakespeare's LAST solo play. It is a ROMANCE — blending tragedy, comedy, magic, and music. It explores: POWER (who has it, who wants it, what it does to you), COLONISATION (the encounter between the European Prospero and the 'native' Caliban), FORGIVENESS (can you forgive your worst enemies?), and the relationship between ART and LIFE (the play itself IS Prospero's 'magic').
2. Characters
| Character | Role |
|---|---|
| Prospero | The rightful DUKE OF MILAN. Exiled 12 years ago. A powerful MAGICIAN. Controls the island and its spirits. Father of Miranda. |
| Miranda | Prospero's 15-year-old daughter. Has lived on the island since she was 3. INNOCENT. Has seen no man except her father and Caliban. |
| Ariel | An AIRY SPIRIT. Served Prospero for 12 years — in exchange for being FREED from a tree where the witch Sycorax had imprisoned him. Longs for FREEDOM. |
| Caliban | The 'native' of the island. Son of the witch Sycorax. Prospero enslaved him. He RESENTS his servitude. 'The most COMPLEX and debated character. Is he a MONSTER — or a VICTIM of colonialism?' |
| Ferdinand | The PRINCE OF NAPLES. Shipwrecked. Falls in LOVE with Miranda. |
| Alonso | The KING OF NAPLES. Helped Antonio usurp Prospero's dukedom 12 years ago. Wracked with GUILT — and GRIEF (believes his son Ferdinand is dead). |
| Antonio | Prospero's BROTHER. USURPED the dukedom. UNREPENTANT. 'The play's true villain — alongside Sebastian.' |
| Sebastian | Alonso's brother. Plots to MURDER Alonso and seize the throne — mirroring Antonio's usurpation. |
| Gonzalo | An honest OLD COUNSELLOR. He helped Prospero and Miranda survive when they were exiled — secretly providing food, water, and Prospero's BOOKS. 'The one good man among the shipwrecked nobles.' |
| Trinculo & Stephano | A Jester and a drunken BUTLER. COMIC RELIEF. They plot with Caliban to overthrow Prospero — a parody of the main usurpation plot. |
3. Plot Summary
Act 1 — The Storm and The Backstory
The Tempest (Scene 1) : A VIOLENT STORM (the 'tempest' of the title) strikes a ship carrying Alonso (King of Naples), Ferdinand (his son), Antonio, Sebastian, Gonzalo, and others. The ship appears to be WRECKED. 'We split, we split!' — the passengers believe they are drowning.
Prospero's Story (Scene 2) : On the island, Miranda watches the storm and BEGS her father to stop it. Prospero reveals: 'I created this storm — through my magic. No one has been harmed.' He then tells Miranda the TRUTH about their past:
- Twelve years ago, Prospero was the DUKE OF MILAN. He loved BOOKS and LEARNING. He entrusted the day-to-day running of the state to his brother, ANTONIO.
- Antonio BETRAYED him. He conspired with Alonso (King of Naples) to OVERTHROW Prospero. Prospero and the infant Miranda were put on a LEAKY BOAT and set adrift at sea — left to DIE.
- GONZALO, an honest counsellor, secretly provided them with food, water, clothes, and — MOST IMPORTANTLY — Prospero's BOOKS of magic.
- They landed on THIS ISLAND. For 12 years, Prospero has studied magic, commanded the spirits of the island (including ARIEL), and RAISED MIRANDA.
- NOW: his enemies have sailed past the island. Prospero has his CHANCE for REVENGE. He has shipwrecked them — and brought them safely ashore, scattered in groups.
Ariel and Caliban: Ariel reports: 'All safe. The ship is hidden in the harbour. The sailors are asleep. The rest are scattered about the island.' Ariel reminds Prospero: 'You PROMISED me my FREEDOM.' Prospero reminds Ariel: 'I FREED YOU from the pine tree where Sycorax imprisoned you for 12 years.'
Caliban enters — cursing Prospero: 'This island's mine, by Sycorax my mother, / Which thou takest from me.' Prospero calls him a 'poisonous slave' and a 'lying slave.' Caliban was once treated KINDLY by Prospero — taught language, given shelter — until he 'didst seek to violate the honour of my child' (attempted to rape Miranda). Now he is kept as a slave.
Act 2 — The Nobles' Plots
Scene 1 — The Nobility Washed Ashore: Alonso is DESPAIRING — he believes Ferdinand has DROWNED. Gonzalo tries to comfort him with IDEALISTIC SPEECHES about a perfect society ('I' the commonwealth I would by contraries / Execute all things...'). Antonio and Sebastian MOCK him.
Ariel puts everyone to SLEEP — except Antonio and Sebastian. Antonio WHISPERS to Sebastian: 'You could be KING of Naples. Alonso is asleep. Ferdinand is "drowned." One stroke of your sword...' Sebastian is TEMPTED. They draw their swords to MURDER Alonso — but Ariel WAKES everyone. 'The conspiracy is FOILED — but it reveals Antonio's COMPLETE moral bankruptcy. He learned NOTHING from his betrayal of Prospero.'
Scene 2 — Caliban Meets the Drunkards: Trinculo (a jester) and Stephano (a drunken butler) wander the island. They meet Caliban. Stephano gives Caliban WINE. Caliban, tasting alcohol for the first time, is DELIGHTED. He WORSHIPS Stephano as a GOD: 'That's a brave god, and bears celestial liquor. I will kneel to him.' He offers to SHOW them the island — 'I'll show thee every fertile inch o' th' island' — and plots to MURDER Prospero: 'Thou mayst brain him... and then, thou shalt be lord of it, and I'll serve thee.'
Act 3 — Love, Madness, and Conspiracy
Scene 1 — Ferdinand and Miranda: Ferdinand is performing PHYSICAL LABOUR — carrying logs — as a 'test' imposed by Prospero. Miranda finds him. They declare their LOVE. He asks her name. She tells him — disobeying her father ('O, I have broke your hest to say so!'). He tells her: 'I am, in my condition, a prince, Miranda... the Prince of Naples.' They exchange vows. Prospero watches — HIDDEN — and is PLEASED. 'My rejoicing / At nothing can be more.'
Scene 2 — The Banquet (The Harpy Scene) : Ariel (as a HARPY — a mythological creature) confronts Alonso, Antonio, and Sebastian with A BANQUET that VANISHES. 'You are three men of sin... You did supplant good Prospero... For which foul deed, the powers — delaying, not forgetting — have incensed the seas and shores against your peace.' Alonso, Antonio, and Sebastian are DRIVEN MAD with GUILT.
Scene 3 — Caliban's Plot Continues: Caliban, Stephano, and Trinculo approach Prospero's cell. Caliban urges them: 'First seize his books... Remember to possess his books. Without them, he's but a sot, as I am.' Ariel plays MUSIC. The conspirators are DISTRACTED.
Act 4 — The Masque and The Broken Plot
Scene 1 — The Wedding Masque: Prospero conjures a MASQUE (a performance with music, dance, and mythological figures) — Iris, Ceres, and Juno — to BLESS the union of Ferdinand and Miranda. 'Honour, riches, marriage-blessing... Earth's increase, foison plenty / Barns and garners never empty...'
Suddenly — Prospero REMEMBERS: 'I had forgot that foul conspiracy / Of the beast Caliban and his confederates.' The masque VANISHES. Prospero delivers his most FAMOUS speech:
"Our revels now are ended. These our actors, / As I foretold you, were all spirits and / Are melted into air, into thin air... / We are such stuff / As dreams are made on, and our little life / Is rounded with a sleep."
Ariel drives Caliban, Stephano, and Trinculo through briars and into a filthy pond. Prospero's DOGS chase them. The conspiracy is DEFEATED.
Act 5 — Forgiveness and Resolution
Scene 1 — The Reconciliation: Ariel reports: the king and his followers are 'confined together... in the line-grove which weather-fends your cell. They cannot budge till your release.' Ariel describes their SUFFERING — and Prospero is MOVED:
"Though with their high wrongs I am struck to th' quick, / Yet with my nobler reason 'gainst my fury / Do I take part. The rarer action is / In virtue than in vengeance."
Prospero CHOOSES FORGIVENESS:
-
He releases Alonso, Antonio, and Sebastian from his spell.
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He FORGIVES Antonio — though Antonio says NOTHING. 'The silence is DEAFENING. Does Antonio repent? The play refuses to tell us.'
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He reveals FERDINAND, alive, playing chess with Miranda. Alonso is OVERJOYED: 'I have inly wept... a daughter... O, rejoice!'
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He FORGIVES Caliban — acknowledging: 'This thing of darkness I acknowledge mine.' (Meaning: Caliban IS his responsibility.)
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He FREES ARIEL: 'My Ariel, chick, / That is thy charge. Then to the elements / Be free, and fare thou well!'
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He BREAKS HIS STAFF and DROWNS HIS BOOK: 'I'll break my staff, / Bury it certain fathoms in the earth, / And deeper than did ever plummet sound / I'll drown my book.'
The Epilogue: Prospero addresses the AUDIENCE DIRECTLY — as the actor playing him. 'Now my charms are all o'erthrown, / And what strength I have's mine own... Release me from my bands / With the help of your good hands.' The APPLAUSE will set him FREE. 'The actor playing Prospero needs the audience to RELEASE HIM — just as Prospero released Ariel. The boundary between THEATRE and REALITY dissolves. Shakespeare, through Prospero, says GOODBYE to his art — and to us.'
4. Major Themes
1. Power, Usurpation, and Legitimacy
Every plot in the play involves POWER — who HAS it, who WANTS it, and what PEOPLE DO TO GET IT. Antonio usurped Prospero. Sebastian plots to usurp Alonso. Caliban plots to overthrow Prospero. 'The play is a STUDY in the psychology of power.'
2. Forgiveness vs. Revenge
Prospero has TOTAL POWER over his enemies. He COULD destroy them. He CHOOSES forgiveness. 'The rarer action is in virtue than in vengeance.' BUT: Antonio never repents. Alonso's guilt is genuine. Antonio's silence is chilling.
3. Colonisation — The Encounter with the 'Other'
Caliban is the INDIGENOUS inhabitant. Prospero is the COLONISER. Caliban: 'This island's mine... which thou takest from me.' Prospero 'civilises' Caliban — teaches him language — and ENSLAVES him. Caliban's response: 'You taught me language, and my profit on't / Is, I know how to curse.' 'Is Caliban a MONSTER — or a VICTIM?' The play refuses a simple answer.
4. Art, Magic, and Reality
Prospero's 'magic' IS art — the art of the theatre. The play is FULL of spectacles (the storm, the harpy, the masque). Each is a PERFORMANCE staged by Prospero. When he breaks his staff, he DESTROYS his art. When he addresses the audience in the Epilogue, Shakespeare HIMSELF says goodbye. 'The Tempest is a play ABOUT the power of theatre to enchant, to move, to transform — and about the MOMENT when the enchantment ENDS.'
5. Freedom and Servitude
Ariel wants freedom. Caliban wants freedom. Ferdinand (a prince) voluntarily performs slave labour — for LOVE. 'Everyone in this play is either MASTER or SERVANT — or both. Freedom, in this play, is what everyone seeks and no one fully achieves — except, perhaps, Ariel.'
5. Key Quotations for ISC Examination
- "We are such stuff as dreams are made on, and our little life is rounded with a sleep." (Prospero, Act 4)
- "The rarer action is in virtue than in vengeance." (Prospero, Act 5)
- "This island's mine, by Sycorax my mother, which thou takest from me." (Caliban, Act 1)
- "You taught me language, and my profit on't is, I know how to curse." (Caliban, Act 1)
- "O brave new world, that has such people in't!" (Miranda, Act 5)
- "O, I have suffered with those that I saw suffer!" (Miranda, Act 1)
- "Misery acquaints a man with strange bedfellows." (Trinculo, Act 2)
- "I'll break my staff... I'll drown my book." (Prospero, Act 5)
