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Othello's Jealousy

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Jealousy Anger. Envy. Resentment. These are all emotions that are caused by jealousy. Othello and Iago, the main characters of William Shakespeare’s tragedy Othello, is overwhelmed by the strong emotions that ensues through jealousy. In this novel, Othello is turned against his virtues through tricks and lies of Iago's viper tongue. Iago’s, corrosive image enveloped through his jealousy and hate for Othello because he believes he slept with his wife and took away his lieutenancy. Through this jealousy Iago destroys Othello's mind from the inside out by corroding the images of the people he holds closest. Jealousy is a destructive force that vacuums people in creating a former image of their self, thus making them irrational and insecure about …show more content…

For instance, after Othello is poisoned by Iago's lies about his wife he is changed mentally. Othello claims that, “'Tis not to make me jealous to say my wife is fair, feeds well, loves company, is free of speech, sings, plays and dances well; Where virtue is, these are more virtuous: Nor from mine own weak merits will I draw the smallest fear or doubt of her revolt; For she had eyes, and chose me. No, Iago; I'll see before I doubt; when I doubt, prove; And on the proof, there is no more but this,— away at once with love or jealousy!” (3.3. 188-197). Othello tries to reason that Desdemona “had eyes and chose [him]”. However, Iago has already supplanted jealousy and suspicion into Othello's mind. This causes little amounts of evidence seem like absolute proof and will haunt his mind and memory. Furthermore, proving that jealousy is a dangerous tool used to get into people's heads and make them think differently/ out of proportion. Another example of jealousy causing Othello to destroy himself is after he kills his wife and learns the truth. Othello begs everyone, “Speak of me as I am; nothing extenuate, Nor set down aught in malice: then must you speak of one that loved not wisely but too well; of one not easily jealous, but being wrought Perplex'd in the extreme” (V. ii. 341-345). Othello wants everyone to think of him as a man so bewildered that he didn't know what he was doing when he accused his wife of disloyalty and killed her. He also doesn't want to be remembered as a man who became so easily jealous because he knows that how much destruction he has brought on himself and the ones he loves most. Othello self destruction caused himself to become another man entirely, a man fueled by the poison that is jealousy. In all, Othello spirals down a path of jealousy that ruins his life by becoming irrational and ravaging his loved

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