1.
Desdemona agrees to plead Cassios case due
Cassio and Othello being close friends and due to Cassios love for Othello and
being a true servant.
2.
Iago says “Ha I like not that” then purposely
stops his sentence to make Othello paranoid and start to overthink Cassios and
Desdemona’s relationship.
3.
After Othello repeatedly urges Iago to tell him
what’s on his mind, Iago says "O, beware, my lord, of jealousy;/It
is the green eyed monster, which doth mock / The meat it feeds on."
Othello then responds “O misery” shows that he has fallen out of love with
Desdemona and that he agrees with Iago that it is better to live in ignorance
then to know the truth about his cheating wife. Othello wants Iago to feel his
pain and join together as one. Throughout the following pages they are slowly
getting closer and closer to thinking the same and agreeing more with one
another.
4.
Iago says, “In Venice they do let God
see the pranks They dare not to show their husbands; their best conscience Is
not to leave’t undone, but keep’t unknown”. By this Iago is saying that the
women in Venice do not have affairs but they just hide it and only God truly
knows what these women have done,
5.
We have contextual evidence to support this
viewpoint of women in Venice from Thomas Coryat, Coryat’s Crudities (1611) as
he says “The name of a Courtezan of Venice is famoused over all Christendome”.
Meaning the women in Venice are profound prostitutes and sexually promiscuous.
6.
Othello may choose to believe this contextual
evidence or not dismiss it immediately as Desdemona went behind her fathers
back and deceived him and he is worried that the same things is happening to
him but with Cassio.
7.
Iago echoes Brabantio's earlier
warning to Othello when he says, “She did deceive her father, marrying you”.
Iago is planting more metaphorical poison in Othello’s head to make him doubt
Desdemona even more.
8.
Iagos duplicitous fashion makes a
bold statement about Desdemona and Othello, saying “Long live she so, and long
live you to think so!” This is significant as Iago specifically uses the word
‘think’ to make him think about everything and to put more doubt in his head. It
makes Othello believe that Desdemona is hiding something from him.
9.
Desdemona's handkerchief becomes an important
piece of stage business. Desdemona produced the handkerchief, as it is an
iconic symbol of Othello’s and her love. Othello’s mum gave it to him then he
gave it to Desdemona. As long as Desdemona has Othello’s handkerchief their
love for one another will never die. Shortly following Desdemona producing the
handkerchief “He pushes the handkerchief away, and it falls”. This symbolizes
the end of their love between one another. From this point things will only get
worst. Shortly after Emilia finds the handkerchief on the floor and plans to
give it to Iago.
. . Emilia is motivated to give the
handkerchief to Iago as she is desperate for his love and willing to do
anything to get it. She knows the handkerchief will please Iago as he has asked
her to steal it for her before. However she has found it and has not stolen it
but feels no guilt. She is naïve to what Iago plans to do with it.
1. Iago intends to use it as a device to
get Othello to believe his deceiving stories about Desdemona and Michael
Cassios new found love for one another and the fact that she has been sleeping
around with him. The audience knows this to not be true, but Othello is
ignorant.
1. When Othello returns to the
scene upset and angry he holds Iago by the throat and says “Ha, ha, false
to me?” meaning ‘you dare lie to me?’
1. What 'proof' of
Desdemona's disloyalty does Iago give Othello? Iago gives proof of
Desdemona’s disloyalty through an unconvincing lie, however it manages to
convince Othello, which raises questions about how great this tragic hero truly
is. Iago says “I lay with Cassio lately, And, being troubled with a ranging
tooth, I could not sleep. There are a kind of men so loose of soul, That in
their sleeps will mutter their affairs: One of this kind is Cassio .In sleep I
heard him say ‘Sweet Desdemona, Let us be wary, let us hide our loves’; And
then, sir, would he gripe and wring my hand, Cry out ‘Sweet creature!’, and
then kiss me hard, As if he plucked up kisses by the roots, That grew upon my
lips; then laid his leg Over my thigh, and sighed, and kissed, and then Cried
‘Cursed fate, that gave thee to the Moor!’”
1. Iagos final proof is the handkerchief
his wife Emilia found and gave to him. When Othello approaches Desdemona about
the handkerchief and wishes her to present it she will not be able to find it
meaning Othello will believe what Iago just says- “I know not that; but such
handkerchief (I am sure it was your wife’s) did I today See Cassio wipe his
beard with.”
1.
Othello’s language is noticeable
different in this scene as it become increasing monosyllabic and more like
Iagos as they start to become closer and closer together. This scene is
arguable homoerotic as there is a scene where Iago and Othello exchange wedding
vows and become as one, reflecting their shared language type dialect.