Prospero is a sympathetic character in the story The Tempest, but sometimes he can be a unsympathetic person because he uses magic to control other people to gain power, such as his daughter, Miranda. Based on this text from the book “...will ever after droop. Here cease more questions. Thou art inclined to sleep. ‘Tis a good dullness, and give it way: i know thou canst not choose” (519). When Prospero
Prospero is a sympathetic character in the story The Tempest, but sometimes he can be a unsympathetic person because he uses magic to control other people to gain power, such as his daughter, Miranda. Based on this text from the book “...will ever after droop. Here cease more questions. Thou art inclined to sleep. ‘Tis a good dullness, and give it way: i know thou canst not choose” (519). When Prospero