Sum ting wong

Wai yu so dim

Act One Scene Two

Posted by mitchells on April 26, 2007

The two hardest lines that I read through and actually managed to figure out are as follows;

  • Tell your piteous heart there’s no harm done“(line 16/17), this line actually means, don’t worry they won’t get hurt, this is possible to figure out if you keep reading down the page.
  • who was so firm, so constant, that his coil would not infect his reason“(line 244/245), this line actually means, who is so steady that a disturbance couldn’t effect him.

Two lines that weren’t actually hard, but just tricky to figure out;

  • It was a torment to lay upon the damned, which Sycorax could not again undo
  • “Thy nerves are in their infancy again and have no vigor in them”

Here is a few questions that were a mystery to me throughout this scene;

  • Did Shakespeare believe in magic?
  • Is this scene based on a myth or is it just a made up story?
  • Where do most of Shakespeare’s stories come from?

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