Wednesday, October 2, 2019
Jealousy in William Shakespeares Othello Essay -- William Shakespeare
Jealousy in William Shakespeare's Othello       In the play Othello, jealousy and envy are prominent themes from the     beginning to the end. As the play slowly unfolds it is evident that     jealousy is the cause of most of the dramatic actions which take place     in the duration of the play. It is described as the "green - eyed     monster." "Green" representing the colour of envy, and "monster" shows     how destructive and how vicious it can be. This quotation is said by a     character named Iago. Iago has a strong manipulative mind. He is the     first of all the characters in the play to be attacked by the "green -     eyed monster." This is very ironic, Iago is warning Othello to be     aware of jealousy, however what Othello does not know is that Iago is     the one that is building up the resentment within him. As the play     opens we see that Iago is already feeling jealous as he says "That     never set a squadron in the field, nor the division of a battle knows"     this portrays Iago's bitterness and towards Cassio. The reason for     this is, Cassio has just been promoted to lieutenant and Iago thinks     that he is the wrong man for the job. Iago thinks that he deserved it     more than Cassio. This quotation states that Cassio is not an     experienced or practical soldier and should not have the job.       However the main character that is affected by the venom of the "green     - eyed monster" is the main character in the play, Othello. In     Othello's situation, the poison of the jealousy grows slowly as the     play proceeds. Unlike Iago whose jealousy fires up as soon as he hears     about Cassio's promotion. The jealousy that Othello experiences     changes his whole character. Othello has a transformat...              ...f the     jealousy.       In conclusion, it is fair to say that Iago did "enmesh" the characters     in his net of jealousy and did so successfully. However, Iago's lies     caught up to him, as in the end, Othello knew what he had done, as he     "strikes" Iago. He used carefully structured sentences to achieve     this. "Ha. I like not that" is a very good example of this. It is     clear that Iago is also capable of portraying what he wants in what     ever character he pleases to do so in. he uses evidence that is not     proper proof and makes it seem as real as reality. And example of this     is "the handkerchief."       After noticing what jealousy is capable of, it is clear why Iago says     that jealousy is a "green - eyed monster." Jealousy did not only     acquire dead bodies like Desdemona, but ruined the true love that     Desdemona and Othello shared.                        
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