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Page 12
... Iago's attack begins at III , iii , 35. Iago and Othello have entered and observed Cassio and Desdemona in conversation . Cassio goes out , and , before Desdemona joins the newcomers , the following piece of dialogue takes place : Iago ...
... Iago's attack begins at III , iii , 35. Iago and Othello have entered and observed Cassio and Desdemona in conversation . Cassio goes out , and , before Desdemona joins the newcomers , the following piece of dialogue takes place : Iago ...
Page 15
... Iago , a person he had much less reason to trust . But can we be at all sure of this ? On the one hand , Iago has a wide- spread reputation for integrity ; on the other hand , there is more than one reason why Othello could suppose that ...
... Iago , a person he had much less reason to trust . But can we be at all sure of this ? On the one hand , Iago has a wide- spread reputation for integrity ; on the other hand , there is more than one reason why Othello could suppose that ...
Page 18
... Iago professes a number of motives for his proceeding against Othello and Cassio . Among these motives is the fact that he suspects both of them of having seduced his wife Emilia . " I hate the Moor , " he says at I , iii , 392 , And it ...
... Iago professes a number of motives for his proceeding against Othello and Cassio . Among these motives is the fact that he suspects both of them of having seduced his wife Emilia . " I hate the Moor , " he says at I , iii , 392 , And it ...
Contents
Foreword Page | 7 |
Shakespeare and the OrderDisorder | 39 |
and Cressida | 89 |
Copyright | |
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according Achilles antithesis Archbishop audience Aufidius banishment Belarius believe Bolingbroke Cassandra certainly character claims Claudius comedy conception concerned Coriolanus court criticism Cymbeline deed deposed Desdemona disorder-figures disordered personality doth Dover Wilson dramatic Duke Elizabethan evil fact fair Falstaff feel Feste fool forest of Arden foul ghost gives Greek Guiderius Hamlet hath Hector Henry Henry IV plays hero honour Hotspur Iago idea imaginative interpretation L. C. Knights Lady Macbeth law of order Lear lover Machiavelli Malvolio Marlowe means moral murder nature Olivia order-figure Othello passion poetic Posthumus presented Prince Professor Dover Professor Stoll prophecy psychological reader reason regards Richard Richard II Rome satire says Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare wants Shakespearian Sir Toby soliloquy speaks speech suggested Tamburlaine thee theme things thou tragedy Troilus and Cressida true Twelfth Night universe unnatural usurpation wife Wilson Knight Witches words wrong