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Understanding Caliban's Poem

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Understanding Caliban Caliban, a savage deformed slave who is not take serious by anyone. In William Shakespeare’s play, “The Tempest,” and the poems “En el Jardín de Los Espejos Quebrados” by Virgil Suárez and “Caliban” by J.P Dancing Bear all contain a variety of similarities in his desire for human connection and differences in his presentation.
In Shakespeare's play and the poems, they all similarly portray Caliban as a character who desires human connection. For instance, Caliban does not have any family and wishes he had his mother to be by his side. According to the play, Caliban tells Prospero. He wants his mother back because as soon as Prospero got to the island, he took control and made the beast his slave, but Caliban believes the island is his inheritance since his mother was …show more content…
For example in the poems we feel sympathy for Caliban but in the play we do not. In the Suárez’s poem we feel sorry for Caliban having ). Although it does not say how got them there is still feel compassion for the pain he had to go through to get them. Meanwhile in the play we see him with indifference, since he was labeled as a bad guy like when Miranda said he was. Miranda being this innocent charming young girl, makes us to believe that what she says about Caliban is true. Another difference is the respects he receives from others. In the poem Caliban demands for respects because if you . However, in the play he is a slave so no one automatically respects him. Finally, the ways language affects him. In Bear’s poem, language is a curse and Caliban is ungrateful for it, he hates the language he has been taught because all he has learned is to curse and he does not want to use that language but that one of his mother. Even though in the play language is a gift from Miranda and Prospero, it . Prospero claims that he has cared for and educated Caliban and have blessed him with teaching him how to

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