University of Virginia Library


1

The Front of the Stage is open'd, and the Band of 24 Violins, with the Harpsicals and Theorbo's which accompany the Voices, are plac'd between the Pit and the Stage. While the Overture is playing, the Curtain rises, and discovers a new Frontispiece, joyn'd to the great Pylasters, on each side of the Stage. This Frontispiece is a noble Arch, supported by large wreathed Columns of the Corinthian Order; the wreathings of the Columns are beautifi'd with Roses wound round them, and several Cupids flying about them. On the Cornice, just over the Capitals, sits on either side a Figure, with a Trumpet in one band, and a Palm in the other, representing Fame. A little farther on the same Cornice, on each side of a Compass-pediment, lie a Lion and a Unicorn, the Supporters of the Royal Arms of England. In the middle of the Arch are several Angels, holding the Kings Arms, as if they were placing them in the midst of that Compass-pediment. Behind this is the Scene, which represents a thick Cloudy Sky, a very Rocky Coast, and a Tempestuous Sea in perpetual Agitation. This Tempest (suppos'd to be rais'd by Magick) has many dreadful Objects in it, as several Spirits in horrid shapes flying down amongst the Sailers, then rising and crossing in the Air. And when the Ship is sinking, the whole House is darken'd, and a shower of Fire falls upon 'em. This is accompanied with Lightning, and several Claps of Thunder, to the end of the Storm.

ACT I.

Enter Mustacho and Ventoso.
Vent.

What a Sea comes in?


Must.

A hoaming Sea! we shall have foul weather.


Enter Trincalo.
Trinc.

The Scud comes against the Wind, 'twill blow bard.



2

Enter Stephano.
Steph.

Bosen!


Trinc.

Here, Master, what say you?


Steph.

Ill weather! let's off to Sea.


Must.

Let's have Sea room enough, and then let it blow the
Devils head off.


Steph.

Boy! Boy!


[Enter Cabin boy.
Boy.

Yaw, yaw, here, Master.


Steph.

Give the Pilot a dram of the Bottle


[Exeunt Stephano and Boy.
Enter Marriners, and pass over the Stage.
Trinc.

Bring the Cable to the Capstorm.


Enter Alonzo, Antonio, Gonzalo.
Alon.
Good Bosen have a care; where's the Master?
Play the men.

Trinc.
Pray keep below.

Anto.
Where's the Master, Bosen?

Trinc.

Do you not hear him? you hinder us: keep your
Cabins, you help the storm.


Gonz.

Nay, good friend be patient.


Trinc.

I, when the Sea is: hence; what care these roarers for
the name of Duke? to Cabin; silence; trouble us not.


Gonz.

Good friend, remember whom thou hast aboard.


Trinc.

None that I love more than my self: you are a Counseller,
if you can advise these Elements to silence, use your
wisdom: if you cannot, make your self ready in the Cabin for
the ill hour. Cheerly good hearts! out of our way, Sirs.


[Exeunt Trincalo and Marriners.
Gonz.

I have great comfort from this fellow; methinks his
complexion is perfect Gallows; stand fast, good fate, to his
hanging; Make the Rope of his Destiny our Cable, for our
own does little advantage us; if he be not born to be hang'd,
we shall be drown'd.


[Exit.
Enter Trincalo and Stephano.
Trinc.

Up aloft, Lads. Come, reef both Topsails.



3

Steph.

Make haste, let's weigh, let's weigh, and off to Sea.


[Ex. Steph.
Enter two Marriners, and pass over the Stage.
Trinc.

Hands down! man your Main-Capstorm.


Enter Mustacho and Ventoso at the other door.
Must.

Up aloft! and man your Seere-Capstorm.


Vent.

My Lads, my Hearts of gold, get in your Capstorm-Bar.
Hoa up, hoa up, &c.


[Exeunt Mustacho and Ventoso.
Enter Stephano.
Steph.
Hold on well! hold on well! nip well there;
Quarter-Master, get's more Nippers.
[Exit Steph.

Enter two Marriners, and pass over again.
Trinc.
Turn out, turn out all hands to Capstorm.
You dogs, is this a time to sleep? lubbord.
Heave together, Lads.

[Trincalo whistles.
[Exeunt Mustacho and Ventoso.
Must.
within.
Our Vial's broke.

Vent.
within.

'Tis but our Vial-block has given way. Come
heave, Lads! we are fix'd again. Heave together, Bullyes.


Enter Stephano.
Steph.
Cut down the Hammocks! cut down the Hammocks!
Come, my Lads: Come, Bullyes, chear up! heave lustily.
The Anchor's a peek.

Trinc.
Is the Anchor a Peek?

Steph.
Is a weigh! is a weigh.

Trinc.
Up aloft, my Lads, upon the Fore-castle!
Cut the Anchor, cut him.

All
within.

Haul Catt, Haul Catt, &c. Haul Catt, haul:
haul Catt, haul. Below.


Steph.

Aft, aft, and lose the Misen!


Trinc.

Get the Misen-tack aboard. Haul aft Misen-sheet!


Enter Mustacho.
Must.

Loose the Main-top-sail!


Steph.

Let him alone, there's too much Wind.



4

Trinc.

Loose Fore-sail! Haul aft both sheets! trim her right
afore the Wind. Aft! aft! Lads, and hale up the Misen here.


Must.

A Mackrel-gale, Master.


Steph.
within.

Port hard, port! the Wind veeres forward,
bring the Tack aboard Portis. Star-board, star-board, a little
steady; now steady, keep her thus, no nearer you cannot come,
till the Sails are loose.


Enter Ventoso.
Vent.

Some hands down: the Guns are loose.


[Ex. Must.
Trinc.

Try the Pump, try the Pump.


[Exit Vent.
Enter Mustacho at the other door.
Must.

O Master! six foot water in Hold.


Steph.

Clap the Helm hard aweather! Flat, flat, flat in the
Fore-sheet there.


Trinc.

Over-haul your fore-boling.


Steph.
Brace in the Lar-board.

[Exit.
Trinc.
A curse upon this houling,
[A great cry within.
They are louder than the weather.
[Enter Antonio and Gonzalo.

Yet again, what do you here? shall we give o'r, and drown?
ha' you a mind to sink?


Gonz.

A pox o' your throat, you bawling, blasphemous,
uncharitable dog.


Trinc.

Work you then and be poxt.


Anto.

Hang, Cur, hang, you whorson insolent noise-maker,
we are less afraid to be drown'd then thou art.


Trinc.

Ease the Fore-Brace a little.


[Exit.
Gonz.

I'l warrant him for drowning, though the Ship were no
stronger than a Nut-shell, and as leaky as an unstanch'd Wench.


Enter Alonzo and Ferdinand.
Ferd.

For my self I care not, but your loss brings a thousand
Deaths to me.


Alonzo.

O name not me, I am grown old, my Son; I now am
tedious to the world, and that, by use, is so to me: But, Ferdinand,
I grieve my Subjects loss in thee: Alas, I suffer justly for
my crimes, but why thou shouldst—O Heaven!

[A cry within.

5

Heark, farewel, my Son, a long farewel!


Enter Trincalo, Mustacho, and Ventoso.
Trinc.

What, must our mouthes be cold then?


Vent.

All's lost. To prayers, to prayers.


Gonz.

The Duke and Prince are gone within to prayers.
Let's assist them.


Must.

Nay, we may e'en pray to; our case is now alike.


Ant.

Mercy upon us! we split, we split.


Gonz.

Let's all sink with the Duke, and the young Prince.


[Exeunt.
Enter Stephano, Trincalo.
Trinc.

The Ship is sinking.


[A new cry within.
Steph.

Run her ashore!


Trinc.

Luff! luff! or we are all lost! there's a Rock upon
the Starboard-Bow.


Steph.

She strikes, she strikes! All shift for themselves.


[Exeunt.

SCENE II.

In the midst of the Shower of Fire the Scene changes. The Cloudy Sky, Rocks, and Sea vanish; and when the Lights return, discover that Beautiful part of the Island, which was the habitation of Prospero; 'Tis compos'd of three Walks of Cypress-trees, each Side-walk leads to a Cave, in one of which Prospero keeps his Daughters, in the other Hippolito: The Middle-Walk is of a great depth, and leads to an open part of the Island.
Enter Prospero and Miranda.
Prosp.

Miranda, where's your Sister?


Miran.

I left her looking from the pointed Rock, at the walks
end, on the huge beat of Waters.


Prosp.

It is a dreadful object.


Mir.

If by your Art, my dearest Father, you have put them
in this roar, allay 'em quickly.


Prosp.

I have so order'd, that not one creature in the ship is
lost:

I have done nothing but in care of thee,

6

My Daughter, and thy pretty Sister:
You both are ignorant of what you are,
Not knowing whence I am, nor that I'm more
Than Prospero, Master of a narrow Cell,
And thy unhappy Father.

Mir.

I ne'r endeavour'd to know more then you were pleas'd
to tell me.


Prosp.
I should inform thee farther.

Mir.
You often, Sir, began to tell me what I am,
But then you stopt.

Prosp.
The hour's now come;

Obey, and be attentive. Canst thou remember a time before we
came into this Cell? I do not think thou canst, for then thou
wert not full three years old.


Mir.

Certainly I can, Sir.


Prosp.

Tell me the image then of any thing which thou dost
keep in thy remembrance still.


Mir.

Sir, had I not four or five Women once that tended me?


Prosp.

Thou hadst, and more, Miranda: what seest thou else
in the dark back-ward, and abyss of Time?

If thou remembrest ought e'r thou cam'st here, then how thou
cam st thou may'st remember too.


Mir.

Sir, that I do not.


Prosp.

Fifteen years since, Miranda, thy Father was the Duke
of Millan, and a Prince of power.


Mir.

Sir, are not you my Father?


Prosp.

Thy Mother was all virtue, and she said, Thou wast
my Daughter, and thy Sister too.


Mir.

O Heavens! what foul play had we, that we hither
came, or was't a blessing that we did?


Prosp.

Both, both, my Girl.


Mir.

But, Sir, I pray proceed.


Prosp.

My Brother, and thy Uncle, call'd Antonio, to whom
I trusted then the manage of my State, while I was wrap'd with
secret Studies: That false Uncle

Having attain'd the craft of granting suits, and of denying
them; whom to advance, or lop, for over-topping, soon
was grown the Ivy which did hide my Princely Trunk, and


7

suck'd my verdure out: thou attend'st not.


Mir.

O good Sir, I do.


Prosp.

I thus neglecting worldly ends, and bent to closeness,
and the bettering of my mind, wak'd in my false Brother an
evil nature:

He did believe

He was indeed the Duke, because he then did execute the outward
face of Sovereignty. Do'st thou still mark me?


Mir.

Your story would cure deafness.


Prosp.

This false Duke needs would be Absolute Millan, and
Confederates with Savoy's Duke, to give him Tribute, and to
do him Homage.


Mir.

False man!


Prosp.
This Duke of Savoy being an Enemy,
To me inveterate, strait grants my Brother's suit,
And on a night

Mated to his design, Antonio opened the gates of Millan, and
i'th' dead of darkness, hurri'd me thence with thy young Sister,
and thy crying self.


Mir.

But wherefore did they not that hour destroy us?


Prosp.

They durst not, Girl, in Millan, for the love my people
bore me; in short they hurri'd us away to Savoy, and thence
aboard a Bark at Nissa's Port: bore us some Leagues to Sea,
where they prepar'd a rotten carkass of a Boat, not rigg'd, no
Tackle, Sail, nor Mast; the very Rats instinctively had quit it.


Mir.

Alack! what trouble was I then to you?


Prosp.

Thou and thy Sister were two Cherubins, which did
preserve me: you both did smile, infus'd with fortitude from
Heaven.


Mir.

How came we ashoar?


Prosp.

By Providence Divine,

Some food we had, and some fresh Water, which a Nobleman
of Savoy, called Gonzalo, appointed Master of that black design,
gave us; with rich Garments, and all necessaries, which
since have steaded much: and of his gentleness (knowing
I lov'd my Books he furnish'd me from mine own Library, with
Volumes which I prize above my Dukedom.


Mir.

Would I might see that man.



8

Prosp.

Here in this Island we arriv'd, and here have I your
Tutor been. But by my skill I find, that my Mid-heaven doth
depend on a most happy Star, whose influence if I now court
not, but omit, my Fortunes will ever after droop: here cease
more questions, thou art inclin'd to sleep: 'tis a good dulness,
and give it way; I know thou canst not chuse.

[She falls asleep.
Come away, my Spirit: I am ready now, approach,
My Ariel, Come.

[Enter Ariel.
Ariel.

All hail, great Master, grave Sir, hail, I come to answer
thy best pleasure, be it to fly, to swim, to shoot into the fire, to
ride on the curl'd Clouds; to thy strong bidding, task Ariel
and all his Qualities.


Prosp.

Hast thou, Spirit, perform'd to point the Tempest that
I bad thee?


Ariel.

To every Article.

I boarded the Dukes Ship, now on the Beak, now in the Waste,
the Deck, in every Cabin; I flam'd amazement, and sometimes
I seem'd to burn in many places on the Top-mast, the
Yards, and Bore-sprit; I did flame distinctly. Nay once I rain'd
a shower of Fire upon 'em.


Prosp.

My brave Spirit!

Who was so firm, so constant, that this coil did not infect
his Reason?


Ariel.

Not a Soul

Put felt a Feaver of the mind, and plaid some tricks of desperation;
all, but Marriners, plung'd in the foaming brine, and
quit the Vessel: the Dukes Son, Ferdinand, with hair upstairing
(more like Reeds then Hair) was the first man that leap'd;
cry'd, Hell is empty, and all the Devils are here.


Prosp.
Why that's my Spirit;
But was not this nigh Shore?

Ariel.
Close by my Master.

Prosp.
But, Ariel, are they safe?

Ariel.
Not a hair perish'd.
In Troops I have dispers'd them round this Isle.

The Duke's son I have landed by himself, whom I have left
warming the Air with sighs, in an odd angle of the Isle, and
sitting, his arms he folded in this sad knot.



9

Prosp.

Say how thou hast dispos'd the Marriners of the Duke's
Ship, and all the rest of the Fleet?


Ariel.
Safely in harbour
Is the Dukes Ship, in the deep Nook, where once thou called'st
Me up at midnight to fetch Dew from the
Still vex'd Bermoothes, there she's hid,
The Marriners all under hatches stow'd,
Whom, with a charm, joyn'd to their suffer'd labour,
I have left asleep; and for the rest o'th' Fleet,
(Which I disperst) they all have met again,
And are upon the Mediterranean Float,
Bound sadly home for Italy;
Supposing that they saw the Duke's Ship wrack'd,
And his great person perish.

Prosp.
Ariel, thy charge
Exactly is perform'd, but there's more work:
What is the time o'th' day?

Ariel.

Past the mid-season.


Prosp.

At least two Glasses: the time 'tween six and now
must by us both be spent most preciously.


Ariel.

Is there more toyl? since thou dost give me pains, let
me remember thee what thou hast promis'd, which is not yet
perform'd me.


Prosp.
How now, Moodie?
What is't thou canst demand?

Ariel.
My liberty.

Prosp.
Before the time be out? no more.

Ariel.
I prethee!
Remember I have done thee faithful service,
Told thee no lies, made thee no mistakings,
Serv'd without or grudge, or grumblings:
Thou didst promise to bate me a full year.

Prosp.
Dost thou forget
From what a torment I did free thee?

Ariel.
No.

Prosp.
Thou dost, and think'st it much to tread the Ooze
Of the salt deep:
To run against the sharp wind of the North,

10

To do my business in the veins of the Earth,
When it is bak'd with Frost.

Ariel.
I do not, Sir.

Prosp.

Thou ly'st, malignant thing! hast thou forgot the
foul Witch Sycorax, who with age and envy was grown into a
Hoop? hast thou forgot her?


Ariel.

No, Sir.


Prosp.

Thou hast; where was she born? speak, tell me.


Ariel.

Sir, in Argier.


Prosp.

Oh, was she so! I must

Once every month recount what thou hast been, which thou
forgettest. This damn'd Witch Sycorax for mischiefs manifold,
and Sorceries too terrible to enter humane hearing, from
Argier thou know'st was banish'd: but for one thing she did,
they would not take her life: is not this true?


Ariel.

I, Sir.


Prosp.
This blew-ey'd Hag was hither brought with child,
And here was left by th'Sailers, thou, my slave,
As thou report'st thy self, wast then her servant,
And 'cause thou wast a spirit too delicate
To act her earthy and abhor'd commands;
Refusing her grand Hests, she did confine thee,
By help of her more potent Ministers,
(In her unmitigable rage) into a cloven Pine,
Within whose rift imprison'd, thou didst painfully
Remain a dozen years; within which space she dy'd,
And left thee there; where thou didst vent thy
Groans, as fast as Mill-wheels strike.
Then was this Isle (save for two Brats, which she did
Litter here, the brutish Caliban, and his twin-sister,
Two freckel'd hag-born Whelps) not honour'd with
A humane shape.

Ariel.

Yes! Caliban her son, and Sycorax his sister.


Prosp.

Dull thing, I say so; he, that Caliban, and she that
Sycorax, whom I now keep in service. Thou best know'st
what torment I did find thee in, thy groans did make Wolves
houl, and penetrate the breasts of ever angry Bears, it was a
torment to lay upon the damn'd, which Sycorax could ne'r


11

again undo: It was my Art, when I arriv'd, and heard thee,
that made the Pine to gape, and let thee out.


Ariel.
I thank thee, Master.

Prosp.
If thou more murmurest, I will rend an Oak,
And peg thee in his knotty entrails, till thou
Hast houl'd away twelve Winters more.

Ariel.
Pardon, Master,
I will be correspondent to command, and be
A gentle spirit.

Prosp.

Do so, and after two days I'l discharge thee.


Ariel.

Thanks, my great Master. But I have yet one request.


Prosp.

What's that, my spirit.


Ariel.

I know that this days business is important, requiring
too much toyl for one alone. I have a gentle spirit for my Love,
who twice seven years has waited for my freedom: Let it appear,
it will assist me much, and we with mutual joy shall entertain
each other. This I beseech you grant me.


Prosp.

You shall have your desire.


Ariel.

That's my noble Master. Milcha!


[Milcha flies down to his assistance.
Milc.

I am here, my Love.


Ariel.

Thou art free! welcome, my dear! what shall we do?
say, say, what shall we do?


Prosp.

Be subject to no sight but mine, invisible to every Eyeball
else. Hence with diligence, anon thou shalt know more.

[They both fly up and cross in the air.

Thou hast slept well my child.


[To Mir.
Mir.

The sadness of your story put heaviness in me.


Prosp.

Shake it off; come on, I'l now call Caliban, my slave,
who never yields us a kind answer.


Mir.

'Tis a creature, Sir, I do not love to look on.


Prosp.

But as 'tis, we cannot miss him; he does make our
Fire, fetch in our Wood, and serve in Offices that profit us:
what hoa! Slave! Caliban! thou Earth thou, speak.


Calib.
within.

There's Wood enough within.


Prosp

Thou poisonous slave, got by the Devil himself upon
thy wicked Dam, come forth.


[Enter Caliban.
Calib.

As wicked Dew, as e'r my Mother brush'd with Raven's


12

feather from unwholesome Fens, drop on you both: A Southwest
blow on you, and blister you all o'r.


Prosp.

For this be sure, to night thou shalt have cramps, side-stiches,
that shall pen thy breath up; Urchins shall prick thee
till thou bleed'st: thou shalt be pinch'd as thick as Honey-combs,
each pinch more stinging than the Bees which made
'em.


Calib.

I must eat my dinner: this Island's mine by Sycorax
my Mother, which thou took'st from me. When thou cam'st
first, thou stroak'st me, and mad'st much of me, wouldst give
me Water with Berries in't, and teach me how to name the
Bigger Light, and how the Less, that burn by day and night;
and then I lov'd thee, and shew'd thee all the qualities of
the Isle, the Fresh-springs, Brine-pits, barren places and fertile.
Curs'd be I that I did so: All the Charms of Sycorax, Toads,
Beetles, Bats, light on thee, for I am all the Subjects that thou
hast. I first was mine own Lord; and here thou stay'st me in
this hard Rock, whiles thou does keep from me the rest o'th'
Island.


Prosp.

Thou most lying Slave, whom stripes may move, not
kindness: I have us'd thee (filth that thou art) with humane
care, and lodg'd thee in mine own Cell, till thou didst seek to
violate the honour of my Children.


Calib.

Oh ho, Oh ho, would't had been done: thou didst
prevent me, I had peopl'd else this Isle with Calibans.


Prosp.

Abhor'd Slave!

Who ne'r would any print of goodness take, being capable
of all ill: I pity'd thee, took pains to make thee speak, taught
thee each hour one thing or other; when thou didst not (Savage)
know thy own meaning, but wouldst gabble, like a thing
most brutish, I endow'd thy purposes with words, which made
them known: But thy wild race (though thou didst learn)
had that in't, which good Natures could not abide to be with:
therefore wast thou deservedly pent up into this Rock.


Calib.

You taught me language, and my profit by it is, that
I know to curse: the red botch rid you for learning me your
language.


Prosp.
Hag-seed hence!

13

Fetch us in fewel, and be quick
To answer other business: shrugst thou (malice)
If thou neglectest, or dost unwillingly what I command,
I'l wrack thee with old Cramps, fill all thy bones with
Aches, make thee roar, that Beasts shall tremble
At thy Din.

Calib.
No prethee!
I must obey. His Art is of such power,
It would control my Dam's God, Setebos,
And make a Vassal of him.

Prosp.
So Slave, hence.

[Exeunt Prospero and Caliban severally.
Enter Dorinda.
Dor.
Oh, Sister! what have I beheld?

Mir.
What is it moves you so?

Dor.
From yonder Rock,
As I my eyes cast down upon the Seas,
The whistling winds blew rudely on my face,
And the waves roar'd; at first I thought the War
Had been between themselves, but strait I spy'd
A huge great Creature.

Mir.
O you mean the Ship.

Dor.
Is't not a Creature then? it seem'd alive.

Mir.
But what of it?

Dor.
This floating Ram did bear his Horns above,
All ty'd with Ribbands ruffling in the wind;
Sometimes he nodded down his head awhile,
And then the waves did heave him to the Moon;
He clamb'ring to the top of all the Billows,
And then again he curtsi'd down so low,
I could not see him: till, at last, all side-long
With a great crack his belly burst in pieces.

Mir.
There all had perish'd,
Had not my Father's Magick Art reliev'd them.
But, Sister, I have stranger news to tell you;
In this great Creature there were other Creatures,
And shortly we may chance to see that thing,

14

Which you have heard my Father call, a Man.

Dor.
But what is that? for yet he never told me.

Mir.
I know no more than you: but I have heard
My Father say, we Women were made for him.

Dor.
What, that he should eat us, Sister?

Mir.
No sure, you see my Father is a Man, and yet
He does us good. I would he were not old.

Dor.
Me thinks indeed it would be finer, if we two
Had two young Fathers.

Mir.
No, Sister, no, if they were young, my Father
Said, that we must call them Brothers.

Dor.

But pray how does it come, that we two are not Brothers
then, and have not Beards like him?


Mir.

Now I confess you pose me.


Dor.

How did he come to be our Father too?


Mir.

I think he found us when we both were little, and
grew within the ground.


Dor.

Why could he not find more of us? pray, Sister, let you
and I look up and down one day, to find some little ones for
us to play with.


Mir.
Agreed; but now we must go in. This is the hour
Wherein my Father's Charm will work,
Which seizes all who are in open air:
Th' effect of his great Art I long to see,
Which will perform as much as Magick can.

Dor.
And I, methinks, more long to see a Man.