Friday, January 24, 2020
The Pitiful Characters of Othello :: Othello essays
The Pitiful Characters of Othello     Ã     Ã  Ã   In Othello, no "good" love  exists between any of the characters. Shakespeare creates a cast of romantic and  platonic couples whose affection is weak and unsustainable. Iago, not Othello,  is master of this play; he establishes all the action. There is an underlying  weakness and depravity in all the characters, or Iago would never have been able  to ruin so many lives. But Iago is unswayed by the external; his black heart is  his only guide.     Ã       When Iago tells Roderigo to awaken Brabantio and set the wheels of distrust  in motion, he is loud and boisterous, even vulgar. He says, "Rouse him...Do,  with like timorous accent and dire yell as when by night and negligence, the  fire is spied..." (1.1 75, 82-84). Iago is interested only in the act of alarm.  We imagine him lurking around the canals, sticking his bony finger into every  soul to testing their limits and act accordingly. He has no conscience. For  Iago, there is nothing bigger than he to temper his need to destroy.     Ã       Iago's bad behavior sets the tone for all other interactions in the play. He  has no need for honesty or affiliation; he uses his wife to further his plot,  betrays Roderigo, cares nothing for Cassio, and loathes Othello. He is a foil  for characters who may know right from wrong but are not passionately committed  to acting for good or evil. Shakespeare mirrors this noxious model in other  characters' relationships. Desdemona rebels against her father; the Duke takes  Othello's side; Roderigo is so lovesick that he will stoop to any level to win  Desdemona. Even in the primary romantic relationship, Othello's and Desdemona's,  the love is flimsy and easily broken.     Ã       Neither Desdemona nor Othello gush about the heavenly course their love has  taken - never do they claim to be "star-crossed lovers." The origin of their  love lies in the myths that Othello has fashioned from his travels and  conquests, not in common interests or a compatibility of spirit. Desdemona can  only imagine what Othello's life is like; she is too passive to ever truly live.  Though some may argue that this love is mature and doesn't need Romeo-style  proclamation, it is clear that Shakespeare has built their relationship on sand.  					    
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