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Prospero

Decent Essays

When one has wronged another, vengeance or virtue can lead one down two different paths. In the play, The Tempest by Shakespeare, it is noted Prospero has had his own plan since the beginning of the play. Prospero spends his days on a secluded island ruminating about how to get his dukedom back. Throughout the twelve years after he was dethroned, he plans to slowly lure his enemies into seeing that he is a merciful, virtuous ruler and make his way back to dukedom. In the beginning of the play, Prospero torments his slaves, leaving them to loathe Prospero for the cruel acts he subjects them to. With a hunger for dominance over the island, Prospero keeps his two slaves, Caliban and Ariel, captured under his foot demanding that they follow his bidding. After taking over Caliban’s island, left for him by his mother Sycorax, Prospero enslaves Caliban and tortures him. …show more content…

Prospero’s plan to forgive commences at the beginning of the play when he manifests he is a qualified ruler by enslaving Caliban and Ariel. On through his journey, the island grows to have a hatred for Prospero, but this lines up the peak of his plan. Not only does this arrangement maneuver his way back to dukedom, but this plan rehabilitates Prospero, leaving him a changed man. His path to forgiveness proves Prospero’s virtuous act to become the “bigger man”. In the final act of the play, Ariel states, “if you now beheld them, your affections Would become tender.” (5.1.19-20) giving the reader a sense of how powerful Prospero’s forgiveness impacts the people who have wronged him. If Prospero had not planned this at the dawn of the play, he would have chosen vengeance over virtue, before thinking his procedure through, considering that he must have been so bitter after his dethroning. The Tempest demonstrates an important concept of choosing what is right from wrong, like Prospero chooses the act of reconciliation over the act of

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