Othello Key Quotes: Iago Flashcards
“I follow him to serve my turn upon him.”
- Iago only follows Othello as he intends to ultimately succeed and betray him.
- Iago’s deceitful nature emerges, alluding to his role as the tragic villian later in the play.
‘I am not what I am,’
- Opposes Biblical statement: ‘I am who I am.’ Iago alligns himself with hell and the devil.
- Reinforces deceitful, two-faced nature. Iago is not to be trusted.
‘Pour this pestilence into his ear’
- Imagery of death. -> Cataphoric reference.
- Poison in the ear.
‘I like not that!’
- Dialogue which plants the seed of doubt in Othello’s mind, poisoning his image of the ‘Divine Desdemona’.
‘O beware jealously […] it is the green-eyed monster that doth mock the meat it feeds on,’
- Metaphor.
‘Honest Iago,’
(About Iago)
- Dramatic Irony
‘Despise me if I do not: three great ones of the city, In personal suit to make me his lieutenant.’
- Iago is frustrated that Othello chose to promote Cassio over him despite the fact that Iago was reccomended by three great officers in Venice.
‘Were I the Moor, I would no be Iago; In following him, I follow but myself.’
- Cryptic manner of speech which reveals as much as it obscures Iago’s true motivations.
- Iago is not following the Moor out of love but instead to betray him.
‘Call up her father: Rouse him, make after him, poison his delight, Proclaim him in the street…’
- Imperatives; Demonstration of control and power.
- Poison imagery
‘Plague him with flies,’
- Poison/sickness imagery
‘an old black ram Is tupping your white ewe.’
- Racist language
- Animal imagery; dehumanising Othello.
‘Or else the devil will make a grandsire of you.’
- Fixation on sex life.
‘you’ll have your daughter covered with a Barbary horse.’
- ‘Barbary horse’ –> North African breed of horse.
- Racist dialogue.
‘coursers for cousins,’
- coursers are racehorse
- cousins are relatives
- Brabantio will have horse for relatives if he does not do something about Othello and Desdemona.
‘Jennets for germans,’
- Jennets are a small spanish breed of horse
- Germans are relatives.
- Brabantio will have horse for relatives if he does not do something about Othello and Desdemona.
‘I am one, sir, that comes to tell you your daughter and the Moor are now making the beast with two backs.’
- Fixation on O and D’s sex life.
- Coarse language, unpleasant imagery that purposefully antagonises Brabantio.
- Relevant context: Chain of Being, Racist Attitudes in the Elizabethan/Jacobean eras.
‘My ancient: A man he is of honesty and trust.’
(About Iago)
- Dramatic Irony
- Ancient connotes wiseness and honesty which the audience are aware that Iago is anything but.
‘Our bodies are gardens, to which our wills are gardeners.’
- Natural imagery
‘Come, be a man. Drown thyself? Drown cats and blind puppies.’
- Unpleasant imagery
‘These Moors are changeable in their wills,’
- Stereotype that Black people are less assured and thus more likely to change their mind than a white person.
- Iago intends to exploit Othello’s weaknesses, e.g. his skin colour and otherness.