Passions are involved in everyone’s life. Be as it may, you need to be able to balance your passions and your rationalizations in order to make sure your passions stay under control. In the Shakespearean play, Othello, William Shakespeare develops the idea that being overcome by your emotions can lead to severe influences on your ability to make rational decisions. In Othello, all the characters are overcome by their emotions which ceases their ability to make rational decisions. Throughout the story, we see several examples where passions have taken over the characters, such as Othello, Desdemona, Cassio and Roderigo. In each of these cases, the character has gotten in to the mindset where your emotions are their main source of decision-making. …show more content…
In Othello, we are demonstrated through Othello that being blinded by love can cause you to be dazed from reality. Othello is black African prince living in a European, colour-prejudiced society where he holds a high rank in the Venetian military forces. As he is held to a high rank in the military forces, he has very little experience with women and relationships with women. However, in the case of Desdemona, he is sure what he is doing is proper and what everyone else is supposed to do. In Act 2 Scene 1, Othello says “If I were now to die, twere now to be most happy; for I fear my soul hath her content so absolute that not another comfort like to this succeeds in unknown fate”. This quote proves his love for Desdemona is unconditional.This also foreshadows to the end of the play because at the end, he was, again, fooled by his emotions. In Act 2 Scene 3, Othello says “Now by heaven, my blood begins my safer guides to rule, and passion having my best judgement collied, assays to lead the way… Give me to know how this foul rout began, who set it on, and he that is approv’d in this offence, though he had twinn’d with me, both at birth, shall lose me.”. In this quote, we see that Othello is letting his emotions of what he has heard about Cassio and Desdemona get in the way. Othello is getting jealous of Cassio and Desdemona because Desdemona has been spending a lot of time talking to Cassio. But instead …show more content…
In Othello, Desdemona is overcome by her love for Othello to the point that she lets him kill her. In Act 5 Scene 2, Desdemona knows that the end of her life is near but for some reason, Desdemona does not leave. Her love for Othello overcomes the realization of the fact that she is about to lose her life. This is demonstrated when Desdemona says “That death’s unnatural that kills for loving.” in Act 5 Scene 2. Desdemona doesn’t attempt to escape when he threatens her life because her love for him is so strong that she’d rather die in his presence and knowing it was him that she spent her last moment with rather than giving up on her love for the person she cares for the most. In Act 5 Scene 2, when Emilia asks “O, who hath done this deed?” and Desdemona responds “Nobody; I myself. Farewell. Commend me to my kind lord. O farewell!”. This quote demonstrates that even after Othello has attempted to kill her and he was sure she was dead, she took her last breath telling Emilia to say good things to her husband because she wanted him to know she would never betray him like that and that she was truly innocent. Last but not least, in Act 5 Scene 2, Emilia says “If he say so, may his pernicious soul rot half a grain a day! He lies to th’heart. She was too fond of her most filthy bargain.”. Emilia says that Desdemona’s “most filthy bargain” was
The society in which Othello takes place is a patriarchal one, where men had complete control over women. They were seen as possessions rather than being just as equally human and capable of duties performed by men. All women of the Elizabethan were to obey all men, fathers, brothers, husbands, etc. Which leads me to the most reliable and trustworthy character of Desdemona, whom goes through many trials just to satisfy her love. Shakespeare brings the thought of Desdemona into the play by Barbantio, her father, “It is too true an evil. Gone she is.\...Oh, she deceives me\ Past thought! …” (1.1.163)(1.1.168-169), whom has just found she has taken off with Othello and firstly suspects they have been hitched. Shakespeare gives reader the
The relationship between Desdemona and Othello in the play ‘Othello’ is used to express and observe the way that humans are selfish by nature. Although both Desdemona and Othello do sincerely love each other, both of them find great personal gain in their marriage, which clearly contributes to their feelings for one another. Othello, who is a black leader in an overwhelmingly white, Christian society, has come from a troubled and difficult background, being “sold to slavery” and working in the military all his life. In finding a good Christian wife in Desdemona, he finds someone to always support him in hard times, as evidenced in his summary of their romance, “she loved me for the dangers I had passed, and I loved her that she did pity them”. This quote suggests that their love is more self-serving than he lets on; Desdemona loves Othello for the adventures he has been on and the stories he tells, and Othello loves Desdemona because she listens and devotes herself to what he has to say. When Desdemona gets a chance to explain their relationship herself, she is particularly proud of the fact that she “did love the Moor to live with him; my downright violence and storms of fortunes may trumpet to the world”. We note that she mentions her ‘violence’, the way she deliberately disobeyed her father and fled his company to secretly marry a man who is not one of her father’s approved suitors. This furthers the idea that Desdemona seems to be in love with Othello because of the adventures he has been on, and the excitement and liberty of her being with such a man; she is seeking her own freedom in a misogynistic society by defying her father to marry Othello. Their relationship is
In Othello, Desdemona has a relentless nature which allows her to love and care unconditionally. Throughout the play, Desdemona has a determined attitude towards her beliefs and she does not believe other’s opinions. This is shown when Desdemona and Emilia were having a conversation. Emilia tells Desdemona that Othello shows jealously but Desdemona immediately disagrees with Emilia telling her to “Believe me, I had rather have lost my purse/Full of crusadoes And but my noble Moor/ Is true of mind, and made of no such baseness/As jealous creatures are, it were enough/To put him to ill thinking” (3.4.24-29). Desdemona is relentless in her love for Othello and claims Othello to be too noble to be jealous. Her relentless nature makes her love for Othello so unconditional that she cannot see the clear jealousy Othello harbours. Desdemona then shows that she is not only relentless but determined when she makes a promise with Cassio. After being harshly fired, Desdemona promises Cassio that she will convince
Her death is therefore her punishment, furthermore making Emilia a tragic victim as she has died through no fault of her own. Like Emilia, Desdemona is also a tragic victim of the men in ‘Othello’. Her murder, like Emilia’s, is through no fault of her own is a result of Othello’s jealousy and Iago’s interference. What makes Desdemona even more tragic to the audience is the fact that even in death she tries to protect her husband, telling Emilia that she has killed herself, “nobody, I myself”, this further depicts to the audience that Desdemona is a good and pure character. Her devotion to her husband makes her a tragic victim in the play as she can not be blamed for her death.
Shakespeare is known for his use of recurring themes throughout his work, including love, death and betrayal. These themes are present in his work of Othello. However, the most fundamental issue is jealousy. The lives of the characthers in Othello are ruined by jealousy from the beginning to the end of the play. The telling of the story is carried out by passion, jealousy, and death. Shakespeare’s Othello reveals devastating tragic inevitability, stunning psychological depth, and compelling poetic depth; the fragility and mysterious power of love, as well as demons of doubt, and how suspicion can be triggered by manipulative villain (Barthelemy 12).
In addition, Emilia is unwittingly responsible for Desdemona’s death because she is remains silent. The two women often talk about their husbands to one another; in spite of it Emilia doesn’t talk about Iago’s behavior toward her. Unlike Desdemona who declares, “Alas the day! I never gave him cause,” she suggests that Othello behavior toward her is unexplainable because she has not been unfaithful to him (3.4.157). Desdemona also reinforces Emilia to give her a reason as to why Othello is behaving this way; instead Emilia illustrates silence when she says:
Desdemona is portrayed as a very inquisitive women, whom loves to explore the things and people outside of her class. She fell in love with Othello because of her curious nature and being attracted to his acts of bravado. Her intentions are sincere; however her curiosity in this act is seen as folly. She asks her cousin Lodovico about his arrival and informs him of Cassio’s dismissal. This angers Othello as she is praising another man, taking a persona of being proactive about him. For Othello this concludes that she is disobedient and has dishonored him - to put her in place, he resorts to violence:
"You don't love someone because they're perfect, you love them in spite of the fact that they're not” (Picoult, 384). This quote is the definition of true love, something the two protagonists of this play sadly never had. The tragedy Othello is about a general of the Venetian army, and his beautiful wife Desdemona, whose lives are completely ruined by the deceitful, cunning, and cowardly Iago. One of Iago’s biggest accomplishments was breaking up Othello and Desdemona's relationship by getting it into Othello’s head that Desdemona was cheating on him. This really made the reader question Othello’s feelings towards Desdemona as for someone who claimed to have love Desdemona with a passion, Othello sure was quick to believe Iago’s lies and turn on Desdemona. Based on his actions towards Desdemona, Othello proved that he does not truly love Desdemona because he is insecure, lacks trust, and is a very jealous person.
However strong the emotional attitude of prejudices may be in Othello, Love is the most powerful emotion and ironically the emotion that leads to the most vulnerability. Loves of all kinds are tested in the tragedy and ultimately all fail to rectify the horrible situation. Marital love for Othello and Desdemona serve as both a heaven and a hell on earth. As Othello portrays by saying,
It is here that the audience begins seeing a different identity of Othello. Who was once regarded as so valiant and courageous, was now beginning to show signs of severe insecurities dealing with matters, most importantly, such as his lack of experience in love and marriage causing shadows of doubt over his confidence in himself and his ability to be loved by and worthy of someone like Desdemona. Desdemona, although not intentionally, seems to be the reason for all the unrest in Othello. This is an instance in the play when irony shines it's smiling face upon Shakespeare's most tragic characters. Othello feels truly happy with the presence of Desdemona in his life (Act II.1, 181-187):
Desdemona is shown as the most pure and proper of the women in Othello and is put into the center of all the drama. The men of the play manipulate her image of a naive lover to being a “ ...strumpet!” (V.ii.94). Desdemona is oblivious to what is going on around her and stays loyal to her morals but Iago’s rumours lure Othello to thinking otherwise. Desdemona’s true morals is her absolute devotion to her husband. She stayed loyal to her lover throughout the entire play and in the end it did her no good. “Nobody; I myself. Farewell! Commend me to my kind lord. O, farewell!” Desdemona on her deathbed, still defends her Lord’s actions. She does not fight back nor call for help, Desdemona begs for her life asking to “Kill me (Desdemona) tomorrow; let me live tonight!” (V.ii.97). She is not as strong-willed like the other ladies and is Shakespeare’s example of the archetype of the innocence and has the bases of a flat character. After the
She has a loyalty to her husbands in all aspects of life, whether it is mental or physical. If Desdemona had been an emotional void then Iago would not have succeeded in his plan. This would have meant that she would not have lied to Othello about losing the handkerchief, which she did so as not to hurt his feelings. However Othello sees this as an attempt to deceive him and conceal the alleged truth about her affair with Cassio. Even her final words, indicate that she blames her death on herself, and not her jealous husband.
The scene that leads up to Desdemona’s death gives inside into Othello’s loveless thoughts. While in Desdemona’s chambers Othello speaks to us the viewers his inner thoughts saying, “Yet she must die, else she’ll betray more men” (Shakespeare 1532). This is an appalling quote that shows Othello’s thoughts just before he murders his bride is with
In William Shakespeare’s “Othello”, the main character is presented as an admirable leader but a poor rationalist. He is recognized as a hero with the qualities of vigor, charm, and eloquence. However these principles of leadership aren’t always viewed as the criteria for a leader. The battleground is, to Othello at least, is depicted as a place of admiration, where men speak truthfully to one another. Also, the given circumstances of state and warfare are rather straightforward; no one deceives Othello because as leader he should be esteemed. This one-dimensional view does not help him in issues of the heart though. Thus the main assessment of Othello must be that, even though he leads well and means well, he lacks sensible judgment and
Just as Iago believed his plan had been a complete success, Emilia rushed to Othello, proclaiming Cassio had stabbed Roderigo in the streets. Othello closed the bed curtains and opened the bedroom door. As she spoke of the stabbing, she heard Desdemona make one last declaration; “A guiltless death I die.” When asked who has done this to her Desdemona states; “Nobody .I myself. Farewell. Commend me to my kind lord. Oh, farewell” (Shakespeare 1382). Unfortunately, it was too late for Desdemona. However, on her death bed she protected