key quotes act 1 Flashcards
“never set a ________ in the _____” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
“never set a squadron in the field”
- imperative sentence
- establishes Cassio as a man of logic rather than action, with Iago implying he’s inexperienced
“mere p______, without p_______” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
“mere prattle, without practise”
- plosive sounds
- harsh sounds emphasising the resentment Iago has towards Cassio
“I ______ him to serve my turn upon him: We cannot all be masters, nor all _______ cannot be truly follow’d” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
- admits he only serves Othello so that he can plot against him, beginning of Iago’s conspiracy
“In _________ him, I follow but ______” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
- following Othello means he can revenge himself upon Othello
“I am not what I __” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
- claiming he is not what he seems, reference to the Bible, implying that Iago is the opposite of God: the Devil
“thick____” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
“thicklips”
- derogatory epithet
- stereotyping Othello’s race, reducing Othello to a physical attribute, putting Othello as below him
“Rouse him: make _____ him, poison his _______” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
“Rouse him: make after him, poison his delight”
- pattern of imperative verbs
- Iago seems jealous, wants to make Brabantio angry, obvious that Iago is going to cause trouble
“P_____” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
“Plague”
- metaphor
- Iago is relentless in wanting to bring Othello down, he wants Othello dead
“Look to your house, your ________ and your bags! Thieves! T______!” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
- aligns Desdemona with commodities, refers to her as an item belonging to Brabantio that isn’t prioritised above his house
“you’re r____‘d” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
- claims that Desdemona has been stolen from Brabantio
“an old black ___ is topping your _____ ewe” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
“an old black ram is topping your white ewe”
- animalistic sexual imagery
- presenting Othello as predatory and Desdemona
“you’ll have your daughter covered with a Barbary _____; you’ll have your _______ neigh to you; you’ll have ________ for cousins and gennets for germans.” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
“you’ll have your daughter covered with a Barbary horse; you’ll have your nephews neigh to you; you’ll have coursers for cousins and gennets for germans.”
- animal imagery
- connotes bestial and incestual images, hostility towards Othello’s ethnicity, claims that Othello will ruin a bloodline with his race
- context: links to racism against people from the Barbary coast in North Africa
“your daughter and the ____ are now making the _____ with two _____” - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1
“your daughter and the Moor are now making the beast with two backs”
- euphemism
- Brabantio now understands who his daughter is with, sexual imagery is used to anger Brabantio
“O thou foul _____, where hast thou stow’d my ________?” - Brabantio, Act 1 Scene 2
- dehumanising Othello
“the sooty bosom of such a _____ as thou” - Brabantio, Act 1 Scene 2
- dehumanising Othello, referring to him a “thing”