Who is the daughter of propero?
Miranda
Where is Alonso during the storm?
The Boat
What act did Prospero make the tempest?
Act I
Who says "Would I had never married my daughter there! For, coming thence, my son is lost' and, in my rate, she too, who is so far from Italy removed I ne'er again shall see her."
Alonso
What type of language is "Thou shalt be as free as mountain winds; but then exactly do all points of my command."
Simile
Who is the king of naples?
Alonso
Where does stepano and trinculo end up after the storm?
On the shore
In what act does Caliban meet Stephano and Trinculo?
Act II
Stephano
What type of language is "Their great guilt, like poison given to work after a long time, now 'gins to bite their spirits."
Who is the son of sycorax?
Caliban
What place was propero the duke of?
Milan
In what act does Prospero summon the three spirits for Ferdinand and Miranda?
Act IV
Who says "You are three men of sin, whom destiny that hath to instrument his lower world and what is in't the never-surfeited sea hath caused to belch up you and on this island where man doth not inhabit, you 'mongst men being most unfit to live. I have made you mad; and even with suchlike valor men hang and drown their proper selves"
Ariel
What type of language is "My charms crack not, my spirits obey, and time goes upright with his carriage."
Personification
Who summons the tempest?
Prospero
What area is Alonso the king of?
Naples
In what act does Prospero forgive Antonio?
Act V
Who says "What thou shouldst be. Th' occasion speaks thee, and my strong imagination sees a crown dropping upon thy head."
Antonio
What type of language is "He is drowned whom thus w stray to find; and the sea mocks our frustrate search on land."
Personification
Who's on the boat during the storm?
+100 If you name them all
Alonso, Sebastion, Antonio, Gonzalo, and Ferdinand
Where was Caliban found?
Woods
In what act does Ariel appear like a harpy?
Act III
Who says "Do you not hear him? You mar our labor. Keep your cabins; you do assist the storm."
Boatswain
What type of language is "...sometimes am I all wound up with adders, who with cloven tongues do hiss me into madness."
Hyperbole