International audience« Man in Stormy Weathers in the Age of Shakespeare »The opening dialogue between D’Amville and Borachio, in Cyril Tourneur’s Atheist’s Tragedy, renders men’s antithetic philosophical and ethical creeds and attitudes, when they are confronted to hostile natural phenomena and catastrophes. D’Amville’s pseudo-scientific arguments and reasoning suit his atheism whereas Borachio’s blind faith in determinism and superstition cannot help him control his fright when thunder rolls and when flashes of lightening take him by surprise.Historical records and chronicles show that natural catastrophes have always existed. Yet, at the end of the 16th and the beginning of the 17th centuries, the European continent was severely affected...