Iago was very devil he lied to Othello so Othello’s' could leave his wife Desdemona. Othello tells Desdemona that she cheated, but she didn't.all that happened because of othello’s lies . his lies were kind powerful and believable. Othello was wise, but iago tried to make him look stupid by making lies about his wife Desdemona. Iago tried every kind trick to make Othello give divorce to his wife, but what Othello did was more than divorce which leaded Iago to a bad ending. Iago brought big conflict between Othello and…
Citizens of Venice, we are gathered here today to honor and remember Othello and Desdemona who even in death are still bound by their love that is everlasting. Othello, how can words even describe him. He was a valiant moor and an honorable general who fought and did everything in his power to protect Venice against the Ottomans. Oh how he loved Desdemona who loved him despite the color of his skin. I remember him telling me about how she used to listen to the stories of his life and his struggles. He loved her because of her ever radiant skin and beauty. There love is what led to his demise. I am so honored to of had been Othello’s Lieutenant and fought with him in battle. Othello was my best friend and my role model. He taught me everything…
Doomed from the start or unlucky beyond belief is what the name Desdemona means. If the readers looked this up, then this would be a hint as to what happens at the end of the play. Othello is a story that is filled with scandal and betrayal. Most of these topics are passed around each character, but they stand out between Desdemona and her new husband Othello. Othello and Desdemona are partly at fault for their failed marriage, but Iago is the main reason that their marriage ended.…
In A Discourse of Marriage and Wiving, Niccholes states that one should “Make not they friend too familiar with thy wife.” Do not allow your wife to become too close to your friends. Othello allows Desdemona to be in the company of his governors and companions. Even though Desdemona stays true to her dear Othello, Iago leads Othello to believe that Desdemona has not only been sleeping with Cassio but in love with him as well. Othello begins to ponder the idea as he states to Iago “To say my wife is fair, feeds well, loves company, Is free of speech, sings, plays, and dances well: where virtue is, there are more virtuous” (III, iii). By now Othello has fallen into Iago’s awful plan to ruin his marriage.…
| Iago ‘only loves’ Desdemona out of revenge and jealously of Othello as he believes he has slept with his wife. The ‘infidelity’ that is occurring behind is back is eating him alive and so he plans to manipulate Othello in beliving Desdemona is having an affair with Cassio. ‘Deception’ aids him to accomplish this task…
Many of Shakespeare’s plays revolve around the common source of love and hatred. In “Othello” and “Much Ado about Nothing” there is an obvious love story between Othello and Desdemona and Claudio and Hero. In both plays, women have put shame on their families. Desdemona betrays her father by marrying a Moor and Hero was accused of cheating on her wedding day. In “Othello” women are degraded and are looked down upon, as inferior. Iago has the mind-set that women are only good for one thing, having the pleasure to pleasure men.…
Why did Othello decide to kill Desdemona? In the play, Othello by William Shakespeare, Othello, the noble Moor, is married to Desdemona, a daughter of Brabantio. Iago, an antagonist, didn’t have the promotion as a lieutenant, which made him hate Cassio, the Lieutenant, and Othello. He plots his plan to take down Cassio and Othello. Throughout the play, Othello is manipulated by Iago and decides to kill Desdemona for cheating on him with Cassio. After Othello killed Desdemona, Iago’s plan gets exposed, and Othello commits suicide. Othello is most responsible for Desdemona’s death because he falls for Iago’s lies instead of believing Desdemona, never confronts Cassio about the situation, and is the one who actually killed Desdemona.…
I believe that the murder of Desdemona was an honor killing. Othello thought that Desdemona brought him dishonor and gave him a bad reputation.…
Desdemona influences Othello’s life because she keeps him calm. She was a young, beautiful woman that fell in love with a black forty year old man 1.2.66, 2.3.18. He was amazed by her; someone that pretty had loved someone as ugly and old as he. He had so much love for her and respected her so much that he done everything she asked of him. He placed her on a pedestal higher than himself.…
By stating that Desdemona “loved me [him] for the dangers I [he] had passed” and that he “loved her that she did pity them” corroborates Carol McGinnis Kay’s argument that the basis for Othello’s and Desdemona’s love “is the grand romantic picture of Othello that they both admire and pity” (265). Hence, Othello’s “love” for his wife derives from “the image of Othello that Desdemona reflects to him” (265), which is, I would argue, even more explicitly indicated by Shakespeare when he has Othello proclaim to Desdemona that he “does love thee [her]”, and “when I [he] love[s] thee not, chaos is come again” (1314). Although I would insist on approaching those hypothetical nature of the roots of the couple’s relationship with a non-absolutist attitude, considering the limited access the audience has to the two characters either in the form of revealing asides or an adequacy of mutual interaction in any of the acts, I concur with Kay’s point, in that Othello’s love for Desdemona is rather self-oriented, a mirror of his own desirable self-concept as a romantic warrior, contrary to Mose Durst’s rather simplistic perception of “Othello’s love for Desdemona”, namely as having “given his life its most profound meaning” merely…
First of all, the relationship between Othello and Desdemona is weak because it is merely based on pity and not true love. Othello tells the Duke of Venice about how his love for Desdemona began after he was accused of eloping and marrying her without her consent.…
Hey Brenda, you appear correct in the assumption that Desdemona blamed herself for her murder (B. Bunch, personal communication, August 23, 2017). Moreover, Desdemona’s actions before her death speak to her love for Othello even his jealous state. For instance, consider the phrase, “My love doth so approve him[.] That even his stubbornness, his checks, his frowns-… unpin me-have grace and favor in them.” (Shakespeare, 2014, 4.3.20-22). However, the question remains would he have changed his mind, if she had separated herself from him for a while?…
"O, beware, my lord, of jealousy; it is the green-eyed monster which doth mock the meat it feeds on " (Othello, III.iii 169-171) In his rage, Othello charges Iago with the killing of Cassio, his lieutenant who supposedly slept with his wife. Othello then plans to kill Desdemona. Even during the course of the killing, Othello maintains his love for Desdemona (although this might seem a contradiction.) He refuses to defile her body in any way. "Yet I'll not shed her blood; nor scar that whiter skin of hers than snow, and smooth as monumental alabaster." (Othello, V.ii 3-5)He then proceeds to choke or smother her to death. The theme of love in Othello changed from puppy love, the lighter side of love, to jealousy, the darkest side of love.…
Alternatively Desdemona is revealed to be the ideal woman, Cassio even admits“She is indeed perfection.” Othello often makes remarks on her beauty and her wit. Even when he thinks she has betrayed him, he cannot help himself from looking upon her fondly even stating that she is “so delicate with her needle: an admirable musician: O! she will sing the savageness out of a bear: of so high and plenteous wit and invention:—“ despite Desdemona’s perfection Othello lets himself be manipulated into thinking she is unfaithful to him, and he kills her. Emilia, while not as perfect as Desdemona appears to be an obedient wife to Iago. She even gives him Desdemona’s handkerchief without knowing the reason he wants it, when stealing the handkerchief she says “what he will do with it Heaven knows, not I; I nothing but to please his fantasy.” In the end of the play however, she chooses to honour Desdemona and she exposes her husband's treachery as opposed to supporting it. Iago kills her due to this one moment of disobedience. Through the killing of Emilia and Desdemona at the hands of their husbands and the fact that Bianca lives, Shakespeare reveals what he thinks of the relationships husbands have with their wives. He is exhibiting how women are never good enough for their husbands. Desdemona and Emilia are honest women, but in Desdemona’s case Othello believes she is having an affair and to him this is inexcusable. Emilia is killed because Iago sees it as a fit punishment for her disobedience and her lack of support of his dishonesty. Bianca on the other hand has no husband and thus she appears to follow no rules but her own and suffers no dire consequences because she has no one ruling over her. Shakespeare is showcasing the oppression that husbands had over their wives. On top of that Shakespeare is suggesting…
In the play “Othello” by William Shakespeare, the protagonist of the story is Othello, an African, Muslim general who is married to Desdemona. Desdemona is a fair, young, courteous woman who also happens to be white. At the end of the play, Desdemona is killed by her own husband, Othello. Some would say that she is responsible for her own death, the following pieces of evidence support this claim.…