"Ariel's song" is a verse passage in Scene ii of Act I of William Shakespeare's The Tempest. It consists of two stanzas to be delivered by the spirit Ariel, in the hearing of Ferdinand. In performance it is sometimes sung and sometimes spoken. There is an extant musical setting of the second stanza by Shakespeare's contemporary Robert Johnson, which may have been used in the original production.
"Full fathom five" is the beginning of the second stanza of "Ariel's song", better known than the first stanza, and often presented alone. It implicitly addresses Ferdinand who, with his father, has just gone through a shipwreck in which the father supposedly drowned. It is the origin of "the identically worded catchphrase, which means "at a depth of five fathoms " and thus, in most evocations, drowned and lost as the father is. Prior to modern diving technology, an object lost in five fathoms of water would be considered irretrievable. This stanza is also the source of the contemporary English usage of ":wikt:sea change|sea change". Modern usage of the phrase is seldom specific to the sea or drowning, but generally refers to any change that is holistic and seems "beyond recognition" in degree: a metamorphosis. The lines of Ariel's song do not indicate whether the "sea change" was caused by Prospero's magical powers, or simply by immersion in the sea.
Jackson Pollock's "Full Fathom Five" takes its title from the line.
On the gravestone of Percy Bysshe Shelley in the Protestant Cemetery in Romethe lines “Nothing of him that doth fade, / But doth suffer a sea-change / Into something rich and strange.” are engraved. His schooner, on which he sailed the day he drowned, was called ‘Ariel’.
T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land includes the lines "I remember / Those are pearls that were his eyes".
"Full Fathom Five" is the title of the first episode of Hawaii Five-O. In it the villains quote the stanza in full, but with minor variations to suit the plot.
Stephen King's Duma Key includes the lines "Full fathom five thy father lies... Those are pearls that were his eyes"
Laurie Anderson's 1984 album Mister Heartbreak includes the track Blue Lagoon which contains the second stanza starting "Full fathom five thy father lies..." but replaces the end line "Sea-nymphs hourly ring his knell: Ding-dong. Hark! now I hear them — Ding-dong, bell." with "And I alone am left to tell the tale. Call me Ishmael."
The 1998-1999 Australian television showSeaChange is named after a phrase from the second stanza, as are two of the episodes, 'Full Fathom Five' and 'Something Rich and Strange'. Other references include the name of the main character's daughter, Miranda, as well as the frequent freak weather events that occur in the fictional townthe show is set in.
In 'A Brief History of Montmaray', the first book in the trilogy 'The Montmaray Journals', by Michelle Cooper, on page 119, the protagonist, Sophia quotes the second stanza of Ariel's Song as a tribute to one of the characters during his funeral.
Barbara Kingsolver's 1999 novel The Poisonwood Bible includes the lines "Full fathom five thy father lies...Into something rich and strange."
Robert Hayden's poem "Middle Passage" alludes to this passage with the lines "Deep in the festering hole thy father lies, / of his bones New England pews are made / those are altar lights that were his eyes."
It is quoted in "Cibola Burn, Book 4 of the Expanse", by James S. A. Corey