The Tempest Vengeance Quotes

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Ever been in a situation where anger overcomes any other thought? Ever want revenge on someone or something? That’s the main idea in the poem The Tempest by William Shakespeare. Prospero just has some fire against the other characters. To him, vengeance is more valuable than virtue. For Example, vengeance helps you get what you want. When Prospero had lifted the spell on the people from the ship, he said to them “I’ll bring you to your ship, and so to Naples, / Where I have hope to see the nuptial” (5.1.306-7). That’s half of what he was looking for. He wanted revenge on the people that put him there, but also to get off the island to resume what life he had left. What Caliban was working toward throughout the play was to get rid of or be free from Prospero. This was mainly done because he just wanted his island back. And by seeing new people, he had a chance to actually obtain that dream. All in all, vengeance help setup the next play, if there was ever another made. …show more content…

What seems evident in a poem by Virgil Suárez, we can make an educated guess that Prospero had beaten Caliban to his current state. Prospero most likely didn’t have that kind of power before he was exiled. The fire in one’s self can be very easily ignited by the idea of getting vengeance. In Act IV, Prospero used “hounds” to chase Trinculo, Stephano & Caliban out of his trap. He was slightly cruel to them, by setting up a very obvious trap. It was a way to make him laugh, in a time where he is enraged, but also happy by his current situation. Ultimately, many people would be nothing without the fire of