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Othello in the Temptation Scene

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Shakespearean Tragedy

Abstract

One reason why some readers think Othello ‘easily jealous’ is that they completely misinterpret him in the early part of this scene. They fancy that he is alarmed and suspicious the moment he hears Iago mutter ‘Ha! I like not that’, as he sees Cassio leaving Desdemona (III. iii. 35). But, in fact, it takes a long time for Iago to excite surprise, curiosity, and then grave concern — by no means yet jealousy — even about Cassio; and it is still longer before Othello understands that Iago is suggesting doubts about Desdemona too. (‘Wronged’ in 143 certainly does not refer to her, as 154 and 162 show.) Nor, even at 171, is the exclamation ‘O misery’ meant for an expression of Othello’s own present feelings; as his next speech clearly shows, it expresses an imagined feeling, as also the speech which elicits it professes to do (for Iago would not have dared here to apply the term ‘cuckold’ to Othello). In fact it is not until Iago hints that Othello, as a foreigner, might easily be deceived, that he is seriously disturbed about Desdemona.

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© 1992 Macmillan Publishers Limited

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Bradley, A.C. (1992). Othello in the Temptation Scene. In: Shakespearean Tragedy. Palgrave, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-22059-5_22

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