How does iago deceive cassio
Iago is motivated by his anger at being passed over for promotion and wants revenge. His enigmatic comment to Roderigo:. I am not what I am. Although clearly not content with his current position, Iago instinctively knows that he must maintain an appearance of humble servitude and honesty if he is to succeed. To be fair, he had pursued Desdemona before Othello was even on the scene — but having been rebuffed by her father as we discover in Act 1 Scene 1 , and then learning of her marriage to another, he should have honourably relinquished his quest for Desdemona.
We have little compassion therefore, when Iago fleeces Roderigo. ROD: Faith, I have heard too much, for your words and performances are no kin together. IAGO: You charge me most unjustly. However, Iago manages to deceive and dissuade him time and again.
This includes persuading him that Desdemona really loves Cassio and so to quarrel with Cassio to get him sacked, and then finally to murder Cassio as the only way to keep Desdemona in Cyprus and fall in love with him!
What he does not realise is that the wound is not immediately fatal, and that, undeceived at last, Roderigo exposes Iago with the truth:. Act 5 Scene 2. Desdemona is blissfully happy in her marriage to Othello and is enchanted by his tales of adventure and danger. Whether she gets to know him at a deeper level is unknown, but she is totally unprepared for his anger and secretiveness when it appears.
Why does Iago hate Othello? How does Emilia help Iago? How does Iago use Bianca to trick Othello? Why does Iago hate Cassio? Why does Roderigo wake up Brabantio? Why does Othello go to Cyprus? Why does Roderigo agree to kill Cassio? Does Cassio die? How does Roderigo die? Does Othello kill Desdemona?
Deception appears many times in Othello, but in almost every incident the degree of deception is different. There are only a few characters that use deception, and those characters all use different degrees of deception to get what they want in the play. Deception is almost always used through verbal language or body language because it is the easiest way to deceive a person.
The reasons, or intentions, a person has for deception determines the goodness or badness and or severity of the deception. If a person deceives others with good intentions, then, in a way, the deception is partially good.
However, if a person has bad reasons or intentions in deceiving others, then the deception is bad. There is also, in contrast to the definition of deception, the debate over what is deception because it is always different in the eyes of different people. Although deception is always meant to deceive, the degree of deception varies upon the context of the situation.
Desdemona gives one example of deception when she hides her relationship with Othello from her father. Her reasons were very simple because she loved her father she wanted to protect him. Desdemona knew that her father would eventually find out the truth, but she felt that by hiding her relationship with Othello she would be delaying the inevitable pain that her father was going to feel.
Since Desdemona loved her father, she felt that by delaying his pain she would be doing him a service, and because Desdemona deceived her father out of love, this deception was not severe. It was however bad because there was no way in which Desdemona could avoid hurting her father. This shows that even though Desdemona deceived her father and the outcome was bad, it was not severe because her intentions were good-hearted.
That which deceives; a piece of trickery; a cheat, sham This definition states that deception is a trick, a cheat, or a sham, and this implies that all deception is of the same degree. However, it is clear from the previous two scenes that in different situations deception can have different degrees, and that one thing can be more deceitful than another. Deception, which is described as trickery, a cheat, or a sham, is considered a very bad thing.
However, it is possible for deception to have good intentions, and this would make deception partially good. There are many occasions where a person may deceive another and feel he or she has done a good deed. When Othello asks Desdemona for the handkerchief, because he has suspicions that she is cheating on him, Desdemona lies and says she has it. Desdemona lies to Othello and tries to deceive him. This, according to the definition of deception is bad.
However, it is not bad.
0コメント