The suffering of the Tragic hero:
Othello’s soliloquy
The suffering of the Tragic hero:
-“But yet the pity of it ,Iago! O Iago, the pity of it ,Iago!”
The suffering of the Tragic Victim:
The suffering of the Tragic victim:
“the worser you give me the addition whose want even kills me”
“I cry your mercy then; I took you for that cunning whore of Venice that married with Othello”
The suffering of the Tragic victim
The pride of the tragic hero
“my parts , my title, my perfect soul’
He hath achieved a maid that paragons description
will chop her into messes. Cuckold me ?
The pride of the tragic hero . 5.2 Othello
The folly of the tragic hero
3.3 (2 quotes) , Othello is deceived
4.1 asking Iago how to murder Cassio
4.2 When he ignores These lines said by Emilia
(betting her soul n telling to ignore whoever telling him this)
5.2 realising his folly
The blindness and insight of tragic hero
-“thou prove my love a whore”
“exceeding honesty and knows all qualities ,with a learned spirit of human dealings”
Discovery and Learning of the tragic hero
5.2- Learning Iago is the villain (insults)
The Tragic hero being a mix of good and evil
The Tragic hero being a mix of good and evil
Villain being partly responsible for the tragic heros demise
Villain being partly responsible for the tragic heros demise
3.3- Iago first putting hints of an affair into Othello’s head
telling Othello of Venetian stereotype
reminding him of how she lied to her dad
4.1- telling Othello how to kill Desdemona
3.3- “ha? I like not that”
“In Venice they let god see the pranks they dare not show their husbands’
‘she did deceive her father, marrying you”
4.1 “do it not with posion; strangle her”
Inevitability of the fate of the Tragic hero
Revenge
1.1 - Iago saying he serves othello to deceive him
1.3- forms the plan of lying about Cassio having an affair
2.1- Giving Rodrigo instructions
statement of revenge
3.3- Iago planning what to do w the handkerchief (2 quotes)
3.3- I will in Cassio’s lodgings loose this napkin” “this may do something”
2.1 - moment of happiness
where they compliment one another
‘O, my fair warrior” , “my dear Othello”
Tragic Villains motives
1.1- professional jealousy
1.3- belief of sexual jealousy of Othello and his wife
2.1- sexual jealousy
,sexual jealousy causing him actual pain (metaphor)
5.1- Cassio’s life and character
1.1-
1.3- “Abroad that twixt my sheets he hath done my office
2.1- “till I am evened with him wife for wife” +
“the thought where of doth, like a poisonous mineral knaws at my inwards”
5.1- “he hath a daily beauty in his life that makes me ugly”