Othello - key quotes II
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- Created by: Alasdair
- Created on: 13-06-17 12:06
Iago: "In following him I follow but myself" (1.1.59)
Important quote
1 of 42
Iago: "Thus do I ever make my fool my purse" (1.3.377)
Important quote
2 of 42
Cassio: "Reputation, reputation, reputation! O, I have lost my reputation, I have lost the immortal part of myself - and what remains is bestial' (2.3.255-257)
Important quote
3 of 42
Iago: "He hath a daily beauty in his life That makes me ugly" (5.1.19-20)
Important quote
4 of 42
Desdemona: 'A guiltless death I die.' Emilia: 'O, who hath done/This deed?' Desdemona: "Nobody. I myself' (5.2.123-125)
Important quote
5 of 42
Iago: 'Demand me nothing. What you know, you know From this time forth I never will speak word. (5.2.300-301)
Important quote
6 of 42
Emilia: 'They are not ever jealous for the cause,/But jealous for they're jealous' (3.4.156-157)
Jealousy
7 of 42
Iago: 'Is thought abroad the 'twixt my sheets/He's done my office. I know not if't be true' (1.3.381-382)
Jealousy
8 of 42
Iago: 'O, beware, my lord, of jealousy;/It is the green-eyed monster which doth mock/The meat it feeds on' (3.3.164-166)
Jealousy
9 of 42
Iago: 'I fear Cassio with my night-cap too' (2.1.298)
Jealousy
10 of 42
Othello: 'Of one not easily jealous, but, being wrought,/Perplexed in the extreme' (5.2.341-342)
Jealousy
11 of 42
Iago: 'Your daughter and the Moor are now making the beast with two backs' (1.1.116-118)
Gender and sexuality
12 of 42
Brabantio: 'A maiden never bold/Of spirit so still and quiet' (1.3.94-95)
Gender and sexuality
13 of 42
Brabantio: 'She has deceived her father, and may thee' (1.3.290)
Gender and sexuality
14 of 42
Iago: 'You rise to play, and go to bed to work' (2.1.114)
Gender and sexuality
15 of 42
Emilia: 'They are all but stomachs, and we all but food: They eat us hungerly, and when they are full They belch us' (3.4.100-102)
Gender and sexuality
16 of 42
Cassio: "And think it no addition, nor my wish, To have him see me womaned' (3.4.190-191)
Gender and sexuality
17 of 42
Emilia: 'I nothing, but to please his fantasy' (3.3.296)
Gender and sexuality
18 of 42
Othello: 'I took you for that cunning whore of Venice/That married with Othello' (4.2.88-89)
Gender and sexuality
19 of 42
Emilia: 'I do not think it is their husbands' faults/If wives do fall' (4.3.85-86)
Gender and sexuality
20 of 42
Othello: 'She loved me for the dangers I passed/And I loved her that she did pity them' (1.3.166-167)
Love and war
21 of 42
Othello: 'Othello's occupation's gone' (3.3.354)
Love and war
22 of 42
Brabantio: 'She was half the wooer' (1.3.174)
Love and war
23 of 42
Othello: 'I do love thee! And when I love thee not/Chaos is come again' (3.3.91-92)
Love and war
24 of 42
Othello: 'Now art thou my lieutenant.' Iago: 'I am your own for ever' (3.3.475-476)
Love and war
25 of 42
Othello: 'Yet she must die, else she'll betray more men' (5.2.6)
Love and war
26 of 42
Othello: 'I have done the state some service, and they know't:' (5.2.335)
Love and war
27 of 42
Othello: 'I kissed thee ere I killed thee: no way but this, Killing myself, to die upon a kiss' (5.2.354-355)
Love and war
28 of 42
Iago: 'An old black ram/Is tupping your white ewe!' (1.1.89-90)
Race
29 of 42
Othello: 'Haply for I am black/And have not those soft parts of conversation' (3.3.260-261)
Race
30 of 42
Duke: 'Your son-in-law is more fair than black' (1.3.287)
Race
31 of 42
Brabantio: 'Against all rules of nature' (1.3.101)
Race
32 of 42
Iago: 'The Moor is of free and open nature/That thinks men honest that but seem to be so' (1.3.393-394)
Honesty and Deception
33 of 42
Iago: 'And what's he then that says I play the villain?/When this advice is free I give and honest' (2.3.326-327)
Honesty and Deception
34 of 42
Othello: 'I think my wife be honest, and think she is not, I think that thou are just, and think thou art not' (3.3.381-382)
Honesty and Deception
35 of 42
Bianca: 'I am no strumpet, but of life as honest As you, that thus abuse me.' (5.1.122-123)
Honesty and Deception
36 of 42
Othello: 'My friend thy husband, honest, honest Iago' (5.2.153)
Honesty and Deception
37 of 42
Iago: 'I am not what I am' (1.1.66)
Honesty and Deception
38 of 42
'...the tragical part is, plainly none other, than a Bloody Farce, without salt or savour'
Thomas Rymer (critic)
39 of 42
'...we learn from Othello this very useful moral, not to make an unequal match; in the second place, we learn not to yield to readily to suspicion'
Samuel Johnson (critic)
40 of 42
'...a great man naturally modest but fully conscious of his worth...'
A.C. Bradley (critic)
41 of 42
'...I have never read a more terrible exposure of human weakness..than the last great speech of Othello...#
T.S. Eliot (critic)
42 of 42
Other cards in this set
Card 2
Front
Important quote
Back
Iago: "Thus do I ever make my fool my purse" (1.3.377)
Card 3
Front
Important quote
Back
Card 4
Front
Important quote
Back
Card 5
Front
Important quote
Back
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