Sunday, January 13, 2013

The Tempest

Miranda:
 I pitied thee,
Took pains to make thee speak, taught thee each hour
One thing or other: when thou didst not, savage,
Know thine own meaning, but wouldst gabble like
A thing most brutish, I endow'd thy purposes
With words that made them known. But thy vile race,
Though thou didst learn, had that in't which good natures
Could not abide to be with; therefore wast thou
Deservedly confined into this rock,
Who hadst deserved more than a prison.
(Act 1, Scene 2)

In The Tempest, one of the last published plays of famous poet and playwright William Shakespeare, main character Prospero avenges his right on the political throne by drawing a host of rambunctious sailors, along with his brother Antonio, to his remote island. As the action unfolds between the players, relationships and deep conflicts are revealed, ultimately leading to a fantastic conclusion for one of literature's most celebrated plays. Caliban, the only true native to Prospero's isolated island, is a truly conflicted man, caught in a life where he doubles as the mistreated slave, as well as a callous and savage monster that acts purely out of an animistic instinct. First "rescued" by Prospero, this son of the witch Sycorax appears as a half-witted, almost feral creature that is taught by both Prospero and Miranda to speak and act accordingly as a human being. Caliban's quest for acceptance and transformation into a sensible being, however, is hindered when he attempts to rape Miranda in order to further populate Prospero's remote island. From this point onwards, the father and daughter loose all respect for Caliban, regarding him as a fierce brute and their slave. In the passage above, Miranda openly expresses her attitude towards Caliban, and her failed attempt to teach him the virtues of human life, to which he turned away from and instead crawled back towards his monstrous origins. Shakespeare's use of certain adjectives and verbs in describing Caliban's learning process not only exhibits Miranda's lost faith and negative opinion of Caliban, but also develops Caliban's dual character as the violent, instinctual monster. Words such as "savage", "brutish", "vile", and even the verb "gabble", paint an extremely dissenting picture of his character, portraying him as a true fiend and turning readers away from Caliban's other side of the mistreated slave. Readers, and the audience, are less likely to sympathize with Caliban and pity him for having lost almost everything, and instead take Miranda's opinion that he is in fact a barbarian. Furthermore, the tone created in the passage and the degrading insults given by Miranda to Caliban show the strained relationships between the characters. Miranda's disapproving, almost hateful tone displays the change in their relationship before Caliban attempted to rape her and expose his side as a true monster, and as a consequence, her cold, distrust behavior afterwards. In the beginning, both father and daughter aide Caliban in his transformation from fiend to human individual, however, this attitude changes completely after his attempt. Thus, Miranda has lost all respect for Caliban, exclaiming that he is "deservedly confined to this rock...more than a prison", and expressing the broken relationship between the two. Caliban, a controversial character, clashes between character archetypes and defies reader's expectations, creating a place among Shakepeare's stage creations.

1 comment:

  1. Great analysis, particularly your point about the way the passage "develops Caliban's dual character as the violent, instinctual monster." It's a bit too easy to skip over or look past Caliban's attack on Miranda, because it's only briefly referenced in the play. But it's likely central to understanding what happened to push Caliban from Prospero's fold.

    ReplyDelete