Q1) What does Miranda say about the appearance of Ferdinand?
Q2) Why does Ferdinand lament his state?
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1. This is the only scene of actual interaction we see between Ferdinand and Miranda. Miranda is, as we know, and as she says, very innocent: “I do not know / One of my sex, no woman's face remember / Save from my glass mine own; nor have I seen / More that I may call men than you, good friend, / And my dear father” (III.
2. Ferdinand may represent the hope of the younger generation who will not repeat the mistakes made by Prospero and Alonso. ... In (Act 1 Scene 2), when Ferdinand first came out, he mourned over his father's death on the shore. Then, Ariel sang for him, and he thought that the song was for his dead father.
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