Caliban Essay, Research Paper
Caliban, the “salvage and deformed slave.” They represent two
different extremes on the social spectrum: that of the natural
ruler, and the naturally ruled. Caliban responds almost wholly to
passions, feelings of pleasure — his senses, while Prospero is
ruled more by his intellect and self-discipline — his mind. Caliban
was born of a witch; Prospero is a magician. However, the types of
magic practised by Sycorax and Prospero differ greatly: Sycorax, in
many respects a traditional witch, worked within Nature and as a
part of it. She worked with devils and the lowest orders of
spirits. Prospero, on the other hand, exercises his magic by means
of strict discipline and study, rising above the natural order by
means of his greater knowledge, and actually coercing spirits of a
fairly high rank, such as Ariel, to do his bidding and control
other spirits for him. In the Arts which both represent, Prospero
certainly reflects the world of the mind. [And Sycorax does
not?]
Although we are not given details of Caliban’s birth, it seems
likely that a creature as subhuman in appearance as Caliban was not
born of a human union. It has been postulated that, to quote
Prospero, he was “got by the devil himself upon thy wicked dam”,
from a union between Sycorax and an incubus (an extremely
attractive male apparition with intention to tempt). Caliban was
therefore a creature born from passion, the offspring of an unholy
pleasure… From their ancestry, Prospero is likely to be more ruled
by his intellect, and Caliban by his love of pleasure.
In the history of each character before the opening of The Tempest,
there is a further contrast. Caliban’s original love for Prospero
and Miranda, and his later misdemeanour and subsequent hatred for
them, illustrate his fundamental reliance on his senses. Caliban
loved Prospero and Miranda because they “made much of me”; and his
response to this was purely sensual in his recollections: “Thou
strok’st me, … wouldst give me / Water with berries in’t”. What
Caliban responded to, more than anything else, was the sensation of
pleasure that being loved and petted gave him. The action that
caused Caliban to be removed from this position and punished was
his attempt to rape Miranda, another example of how Caliban seeks
pleasure.
(Prospero’s position on sexual relations is quite
opposite — he tells Ferdinand repeatedly not to take advantage of
his daughter, and hammers the message home with the masque.) [True
but why? Make the full contrast clear.]
Caliban’s dearest wish is to depose Prospero by killing him and,
rather than resuming rule of the island himself, submit to the rule
of Stephano.
Caliban’s purpose in attaching himself to Stephano and plotting to
kill Prospero is almost wholly passionate. The reason that Caliban
believes Stephano to be a worthy ruler, indeed, a god, is that
Stephano is the custodian of liquor, a substance that appeals to
his senses. His favourable response to Stephano is like his
previous response to Prospero — that someone who makes him feel
good must be good. Likewise, his attempt at achieving revenge on
Prospero is largely in retribution for the punishment Prospero has
visited upon his senses. [well said]
However, though Caliban’s desire for revenge is certainly not
cerebral, his passions in it are not entirely sensual either. The
crafty manner in which he persuades Stephano to aid him in his
plan, by mentioning Prospero’s riches and Miranda’s beauty, shows
the presence of some mental ability; as does his attempted tact in
trying to keep Stephano’s mind upon “bloody thoughts”. Furthermore,
one of his grievances against Prospero is that he stole the island
that was, by birthright, Caliban’s, and imprisoned Caliban upon it.
This is part of the little evidence we have that Caliban operates
using more than his senses and passions. However, Caliban’s mind is
subject to his senses, much as Prospero’s passions are subject to
his mind. Caliban’s underlying motives are still passionate. His
indignation at having his inheritance usurped loses its weight when
we realise that, of his own free will, he will let Stephano rule —
showing himself to be naturally ruled, not ruler. At the end of the
play, when he recognises that his choice of Stephano as a ruler was
foolish, it is not mental reasoning that has led him to this
conclusion, but the evidence of his senses and experience. Caliban
has mind enough to function as part of society, but training him to
become part of that society cannot be abstract, like Prospero’s
failed attempt at educating him with Miranda — Caliban’s education
must be practical and hammered home with his own senses
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Для автора это очень важно, это стимулирует его на новое творчество!