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6 Cards in this Set

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  • Back
  • 3rd side (hint)

Loving Father (first line)

Miranda - "The fraughting would within her."


Prospero - "Be collected."



- completes Miranda's Iambic Pentameter; he's always there for Miranda


- calming Miranda


- though it's an imperative, he is doing it for Miranda's sake

Loving father (1.2.16)

"I have done nothing but in care of thee-


Of thee my dear one, thee my daughter."


- Reveals what one of his motives might be - concern for his daughter (his redemption)


- importance underlined by:


anadipolsis (rep. O'th'last word of a cause and the beginning of the next "Of thee - [...] Of thee my dear one.)


anaphora (rep. o'words at the beginning of successive clauses. "Of thee my dear one, thee my daughter.


- use of such rhetorical devices shows his daughter (and his concerns of her) is constantly on his mind, his main priority so everything P may do, could be a father's desire to get the best for M (even when he borders on sinister.


- maybe he is doing this for his daughter, not for him, for his daughter "who art ignorant of what thou is".



- Epithets: "My dear one." "My daughter."

"I have done...

Controlling/Demanding/Loving? Father

"Does thou attend me?"


"Sir, most heedfully."



"Thou attend'st not!"


"O good sir, I do."


"I pray thee mark me."



"Dost thou fear?"


"Your tale, sir, would cure deafness."



- demanding her to listen to get


But


- "rather to suggest urgency of this narrative to P himself, and his concern to M's 'ignorance' and the audiences'" - David Lindley


Loving father (M his redemption)

M "Alack, what trouble| Was I to you then!"


P "O, a cherubin| Thou wast that did preserve me."



- Prospero likens M to a guardian Angel that preserved him.

"Thou wast..."

PUT TO Clothing FLASHCARDS

[Miranda assists Prospero; his clock is laid aside.]


P "There lies my art."



- magic inheres in his cloak (as in his staff and books)


- Fuller recorded of Sir William Cecil that: 'when he put off his down at night, he used to say, "Lie there, lord treasurer."'


- the relationship of clothing to social status and political function is developed by Antonio (2.1.268-70) and trinculo and stephano

Feminism

"My foot, my tutor."