The Mock Tempest
The Mock Tempest, or the Enchanted Castle is a Restoration era stage play, a parody by Thomas Duffet; it premiered in 1674, and was first printed in 1675 by the bookseller William Cademan. In creating his farce, Duffet's target was not Shakespeare's famous play, but the adaptation of it that John Dryden and Sir William Davenant wrote in the 1660s. According to critic Michael West, "There are frequent nautical metaphors, and 'more noyse and terrour than a Tempest at Sea'...."
Read more about The Mock Tempest: Background, The Plot, A Modern Version
Famous quotes containing the words mock and/or tempest:
“For ever will I sleep, while poor maids cry,
Alas, for pity stay,
And let us die
With thee, men cannot mock us in the clay.”
—Francis Beaumont (1584-1616)
“When from thy shore the tempest beat us back,
I stood upon the hatches in the storm.”
—William Shakespeare (15641616)