Othello, the Moor of Venice

William Shakespeare

Edited by Jack Lynch

[Textual note TK] The notes are my own.

Revised 6 December 2023.


Dramatis Personæ

Duke of Venice   

Brabantio,   

a Senator of Venice and Desdemona’s father

Other Senators

Gratiano,   

Brother to Brabantio

Lodovico,   

Kinsman to Brabantio

Othello,   

a noble Moor in the service of Venice

Cassio,   

his Lieutenant

Iago,   

his Ancient

Montano,   

Othello’s predecessor in the government of Cyprus

Roderigo,   

a Venetian Gentleman

Clown,   

Servant to Othello

Desdemona,   

Daughter to Brabantio and Wife to Othello

Emilia,   

Wife to Iago

Bianca,   

Mistress to Cassio

Officers, Gentlemen, Messenger, Musicians, Herald, Sailor, Attendants, &c.

SCENE:
The First Act in Venice; during the rest of the Play at a Seaport in Cyprus.


ACT I

SCENE I.
Venice. A street.

Enter Roderigo and Iago.

Roderigo

Tush, never tell me, I take it much unkindly
That thou, Iago, who hast had my purse,
As if the strings were thine, shouldst know of this.

Iago

’Sblood,° but you will not hear me. by God’s blood
If ever I did dream of such a matter,
Abhor me.

Roderigo

Thou told’st me, thou didst hold him in thy hate.

Iago

Despise me if I do not. Three great ones of the city,
In personal suit to make me his lieutenant,
Off-capp’d to him; and by the faith of man,
I know my price, I am worth no worse a place.
But he, as loving his own pride and purposes,
Evades them, with a bombast circumstance,
Horribly stuff’d with epithets of war:° military language
And in conclusion,
Nonsuits my mediators: for “Certes,”° says he, certainly
“I have already chose my officer.”
And what was he?
Forsooth,° a great arithmetician, truly
One Michael Cassio, a Florentine,
A fellow almost damn’d in a fair wife,
That never set a squadron in the field,
Nor the division of a battle knows
More than a spinster,° unless the bookish theoric,° housewife — theory
Wherein the toged° consuls can propose wearing togas (in peacetime)
As masterly as he: mere prattle° without practice foolish talk
Is all his soldiership. But he, sir, had the election,
And I, of whom his eyes had seen the proof
At Rhodes, at Cyprus, and on other grounds,
Christian and heathen, must be belee’d and calm’d
By debitor and creditor, this counter-caster,
He, in good time, must his lieutenant be,
And I, God bless the mark, his Moorship’s ancient.° ensign (a low-level staffer)

Roderigo

By heaven, I rather would have been his hangman.

Iago

Why, there’s no remedy. ’Tis the curse of service,
Preferment° goes by letter and affection, promotion
And not by old gradation, where each second
Stood heir to the first. Now sir, be judge yourself
Whether I in any just term° am affin’d° respect — bound
To love the Moor.

Roderigo

I would not follow him, then.

Iago

O, sir, content you.
I follow him to serve my turn upon him:
We cannot all be masters, nor all masters
Cannot be truly follow’d. You shall mark
Many a duteous and knee-crooking knave
That, doting° on his own obsequious bondage, fawning
Wears out his time, much like his master’s ass,
For nought but provender,° and when he’s old, cashier’d.° food — dismissed
Whip me such honest knaves. Others there are
Who, trimm’d in forms, and visages of duty,° appearance of service
Keep yet their hearts attending on themselves,
And throwing but shows of service on their lords,
Do well thrive by them, and when they have lin’d their coats,
Do themselves homage. These fellows have some soul,
And such a one do I profess myself. For, sir,
It is as sure as you are Roderigo,
Were I the Moor, I would not be Iago:
In following him, I follow but myself.
Heaven is my judge, not I for love and duty,
But seeming so for my peculiar end.
For when my outward action doth demonstrate
The native act and figure of my heart
In complement extern,° ’tis not long after visible
But I will wear my heart upon my sleeve
For daws° to peck at: I am not what I am. birds like crows

Roderigo

What a full fortune does the thick-lips owe,
If he can carry’t thus!

Iago

Call up her father,
Rouse him, make after him, poison his delight,
Proclaim him in the streets; incense° her kinsmen, anger
And though he in a fertile climate dwell,
Plague him with flies: though that his joy be joy,
Yet throw such changes of vexation on’t,
As it may lose some color.

Roderigo

Here is her father’s house. I’ll call aloud.

Iago

Do, with like timorous° accent and dire yell terrifying
As when, by night and negligence, the fire
Is spied in populous cities.

Roderigo

What ho, Brabantio! Signior Brabantio, ho!

Iago

Awake! what ho, Brabantio! Thieves, thieves!
Look to your house, your daughter, and your bags!
Thieves, thieves!

Brabantio appears above at a window.

Brabantio

What is the reason of this terrible summons?
What is the matter there?

Roderigo

Signior, is all your family within?

Iago

Are your doors locked?

Brabantio

Why, wherefore ask you this?

Iago

Zounds,° sir, you’re robb’d, for shame put on your gown, by God’s wounds
Your heart is burst, you have lost half your soul;
Even now, now, very now, an old black ram
Is tupping° your white ewe. Arise, arise, mating with
Awake the snorting° citizens with the bell, snoring
Or else the devil will make a grandsire° of you: grandfather
Arise, I say.

Brabantio

What, have you lost your wits?

Roderigo

Most reverend signior, do you know my voice?

Brabantio

Not I. What are you?

Roderigo

My name is Roderigo.

Brabantio

The worser welcome.
I have charg’d° thee not to haunt about my doors; ordered
In honest plainness thou hast heard me say
My daughter is not for thee; and now in madness,
Being full of supper and distempering draughts,° intoxicating drinks
Upon malicious bravery, dost thou come
To start° my quiet. disturb

Roderigo

Sir, sir, sir,—

Brabantio

But thou must needs be sure
My spirit and my place have in them power
To make this bitter to thee.

Roderigo

Patience, good sir.

Brabantio

What tell’st thou me of robbing?
This is Venice. My house is not a grange.° rural farmhouse

Roderigo

Most grave Brabantio,
In simple and pure soul I come to you.

Iago

Zounds, sir, you are one of those that will not serve God if the devil bid you. Because we come to do you service, and you think we are ruffians, you’ll have your daughter cover’d with a Barbary° horse; you’ll have your nephews neigh to you; you’ll have coursers for cousins° and gennets° for germans.° Barbary = Arabic
cousins = kin
gennets = Spanish horses
germans = relatives

Brabantio

What profane wretch art thou?

Iago

I am one, sir, that comes to tell you your daughter and the Moor are now making the beast with two backs.

Brabantio

Thou art a villain.

Iago

You are a senator.

Brabantio

This thou shalt answer.° I know thee, Roderigo. be responsible for

Roderigo

Sir, I will answer anything. But I beseech you,
If ’t be your pleasure, and most wise consent,
(As partly I find it is) that your fair daughter,
At this odd-even and dull watch o’ the night,
Transported with no worse nor better guard,
But with a knave of common hire, a gondolier,
To the gross clasps of a lascivious° Moor: lustful
If this be known to you, and your allowance,
We then have done you bold and saucy° wrongs. insolent
But if you know not this, my manners tell me,
We have your wrong rebuke. Do not believe
That from the sense of all civility,
I thus would play and trifle with your reverence.
Your daughter (if you have not given her leave)
I say again, hath made a gross revolt,
Tying her duty, beauty, wit, and fortunes
In an extravagant and wheeling° stranger° wandering — foreigner
Of here and everywhere. Straight° satisfy yourself: immediately
If she be in her chamber or your house,
Let loose on me the justice of the state
For thus deluding you.

Brabantio

Strike on the tinder, ho!
Give me a taper!° Call up all my people! candle
This accident° is not unlike my dream, event
Belief of it oppresses me already.
Light, I say, light!

[Exit from above.]

Iago

Farewell; for I must leave you:
It seems not meet° nor wholesome to my place° appropriate — rank
To be produc’d, as if I stay I shall,
Against the Moor. For I do know the state,
However this may gall° him with some check, annoy
Cannot with safety cast him, for he’s embark’d
With such loud reason to the Cyprus wars,
Which even now stand in act, that, for their souls,
Another of his fathom they have none
To lead their business. In which regard,
Though I do hate him as I do hell pains,
Yet, for necessity of present life,
I must show out a flag and sign of love,
Which is indeed but sign. That you shall surely find him,
Lead to the Sagittary° the raised search, an inn
And there will I be with him. So, farewell.

[Exit.]

Enter Brabantio with Servants and torches.

Brabantio

It is too true an evil. Gone she is,
And what’s to come of my despised time,
Is naught but bitterness. Now Roderigo,
Where didst thou see her? (O unhappy girl!)
With the Moor, say’st thou? (Who would be a father!)
How didst thou know ’twas she? (O, she deceives me
Past thought.) What said she to you? Get more tapers,° candles
Raise all my kindred. Are they married, think you?

Roderigo

Truly I think they are.

Brabantio

O heaven! How got she out? O treason of the blood!
Fathers, from hence trust not your daughters’ minds
By what you see them act. Is there not charms° magic
By which the property of youth and maidhood° virginity
May be abused? Have you not read, Roderigo,
Of some such thing?

Roderigo

Yes, sir, I have indeed.

Brabantio

Call up my brother. O, would you had had her!
Some one way, some another. Do you know
Where we may apprehend her and the Moor?

Roderigo

I think I can discover him, if you please
To get good guard, and go along with me.

Brabantio

Pray you lead on. At every house I’ll call,
I may command at most. Get weapons, ho!
And raise some special officers of night.
On, good Roderigo. I will deserve your pains.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT I, SCENE II.
Venice. Another street.

Enter Othello, Iago and Attendants with torches.

Iago

Though in the trade of war I have slain men,
Yet do I hold it very stuff° o’ the conscience essence
To do no contriv’d° murder; I lack iniquity planned
Sometimes to do me service: nine or ten times
I had thought to have yerk’d° him here under the ribs. stabbed

Othello

’Tis better as it is.

Iago

Nay, but he prated,° talked nonsense
And spoke such scurvy and provoking terms
Against your honour,
That with the little godliness I have,
I did full hard forbear° him. But I pray you, sir, worked hard not to attack
Are you fast° married? Be assur’d of this, really
That the magnifico° is much belov’d politician (Brabantio)
And hath in his effect a voice potential° powerful
As double as the duke’s; he will divorce you,
Or put upon you what restraint and grievance
The law (with all his might to enforce it on)
Will give him cable.° reach

Othello

Let him do his spite;
My services, which I have done the signiory,° government
Shall out-tongue° his complaints. ’Tis yet to know,— talk better than
Which, when I know that boasting is an honour,
I shall promulgate,—I fetch my life and being
From men of royal siege. And my demerits° faults
May speak unbonneted° to as proud a fortune freely
As this that I have reach’d. For know, Iago,
But that I love the gentle° Desdemona, noble
I would not my unhoused free condition
Put into circumscription and confine
For the sea’s worth. But look, what lights come yond?° from over there

Iago

Those are the raised father and his friends:
You were best go in.

Othello

Not I; I must be found.
My parts,° my title, and my perfect soul talents
Shall manifest me rightly. Is it they?

Iago

By Janus,° I think no. Roman god who looked both ways

Enter Cassio and Officers with torches.

Othello

The servants of the duke and my lieutenant.
The goodness of the night upon you, friends!
What is the news?

Cassio

The duke does greet you, general,
And he requires your haste-post-haste appearance
Even on the instant.

Othello

What is the matter, think you?

Cassio

Something from Cyprus, as I may divine.° speculate
It is a business of some heat.° The galleys° urgency — ships
Have sent a dozen sequent° messengers following
This very night at one another’s heels;
And many of the consuls, rais’d and met,
Are at the duke’s already. You have been hotly call’d for,
When, being not at your lodging to be found,
The senate hath sent about three several° quests separate
To search you out.

Othello

’Tis well I am found by you.
I will but spend a word here in the house,
And go with you.

[Exit.]

Cassio

Ancient,° what makes° he here? ensign — does

Iago

Faith, he tonight hath boarded a land carrack:° ship
If it prove lawful prize, he’s made° forever. he’ll be rich

Cassio

I do not understand.

Iago

He’s married.

Cassio

To who?

Enter Othello.

Iago

Marry to—Come, captain, will you go?

Othello

Have with you.

Cassio

Here comes another troop to seek for you.

Enter Brabantio, Roderigo and Officers with torches and weapons.

Iago

It is Brabantio. General, be advis’d,
He comes to bad intent.

Othello

Holla, stand there!

Roderigo

Signior, it is the Moor.

Brabantio

Down with him, thief!

[They draw on both sides.]

Iago

You, Roderigo! Come, sir, I am for you.

Othello

Keep up your bright swords, for the dew will rust them.
Good signior, you shall more command with years
Than with your weapons.

Brabantio

O thou foul thief, where hast thou stow’d my daughter?
Damn’d as thou art, thou hast enchanted her,
For I’ll refer me to all things of sense,
(If she in chains of magic were not bound)
Whether a maid so tender, fair, and happy,
So opposite° to marriage, that she shunn’d opposed
The wealthy curled darlings of our nation,
Would ever have, to incur a general mock,° ridicule
Run from her guardage to the sooty° bosom ashy, black
Of such a thing as thou—to fear, not to delight.
Judge me the world, if ’tis not gross in sense,
That thou hast practis’d on her with foul charms,
Abus’d her delicate youth with drugs or minerals
That weakens motion. I’ll have’t disputed on;° investigated
’Tis probable, and palpable to thinking.
I therefore apprehend and do attach° thee arrest
For an abuser of the world, a practiser
Of arts inhibited and out of warrant.—
Lay hold upon him, if he do resist,
Subdue him at his peril.

Othello

Hold your hands,
Both you of my inclining° and the rest: group
Were it my cue to fight, I should have known it
Without a prompter. Where will you that I go
To answer this your charge?

Brabantio

To prison, till fit time
Of law and course of direct session° trial
Call thee to answer.

Othello

What if I do obey?
How may the duke be therewith satisfied,
Whose messengers are here about my side,
Upon some present business of the state,
To bring me to him?

Officer

’Tis true, most worthy signior,
The duke’s in council, and your noble self,
I am sure is sent for.

Brabantio

How? The duke in council?
In this time of the night? Bring him away;
Mine’s not an idle cause. The duke himself,
Or any of my brothers of the state,
Cannot but feel this wrong as ’twere° their own. as if it were
For if such actions may have passage free,
Bond-slaves and pagans shall our statesmen be.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT I, SCENE III.
Venice. A council chamber.

The Duke and Senators sitting at a table; Officers attending.

Duke

There is no composition in these news
That gives them credit.

First Senator

Indeed, they are disproportion’d;
My letters say a hundred and seven galleys.

Duke

And mine a hundred and forty.

Second Senator

And mine two hundred:
But though they jump not on a just account,
(As in these cases, where the aim reports,
’Tis oft with difference,) yet do they all confirm
A Turkish fleet, and bearing up to Cyprus.

Duke

Nay, it is possible enough to judgement:
I do not so secure me in the error,
But the main article I do approve
In fearful sense.

Sailor

[Within.]

What, ho! what, ho! what, ho!

Officer

A messenger from the galleys.

Enter Sailor.

Duke

Now,—what’s the business?

SAILOR.

The Turkish preparation makes for Rhodes,
So was I bid report here to the state
By Signior Angelo.

Duke

How say you by this change?

FIRST SENATOR.

This cannot be
By no assay of reason. ’Tis a pageant
To keep us in false gaze. When we consider
The importancy of Cyprus to the Turk;
And let ourselves again but understand
That, as it more concerns the Turk than Rhodes,
So may he with more facile question bear it,
For that it stands not in such warlike brace,
But altogether lacks the abilities
That Rhodes is dress’d in. If we make thought of this,
We must not think the Turk is so unskilful
To leave that latest which concerns him first,
Neglecting an attempt of ease and gain,
To wake and wage a danger profitless.

Duke

Nay, in all confidence, he’s not for Rhodes.

Officer

Here is more news.

Enter a Messenger.

Messenger

The Ottomites, reverend and gracious,
Steering with due course toward the isle of Rhodes,
Have there injointed them with an after fleet.

First Senator

Ay, so I thought. How many, as you guess?

MESSENGER.

Of thirty sail, and now they do re-stem
Their backward course, bearing with frank appearance
Their purposes toward Cyprus. Signior Montano,
Your trusty and most valiant servitor,
With his free duty recommends you thus,
And prays you to believe him.

Duke

’Tis certain, then, for Cyprus.
Marcus Luccicos, is not he in town?

First Senator

He’s now in Florence.

Duke

Write from us to him; post-post-haste dispatch.

First Senator

Here comes Brabantio and the valiant Moor.

Enter Brabantio, Othello, Iago, Roderigo and Officers.

Duke

Valiant Othello, we must straight employ you
Against the general enemy Ottoman.

[To Brabantio.]

I did not see you; welcome, gentle signior,
We lack’d your counsel and your help tonight.

Brabantio

So did I yours. Good your grace, pardon me.
Neither my place, nor aught I heard of business
Hath rais’d me from my bed, nor doth the general care
Take hold on me; for my particular grief
Is of so flood-gate and o’erbearing nature
That it engluts and swallows other sorrows,
And it is still itself.

Duke

Why, what’s the matter?

Brabantio

My daughter! O, my daughter!

Duke and Senators

Dead?

Brabantio

Ay, to me.
She is abused, stol’n from me, and corrupted
By spells and medicines bought of mountebanks;
For nature so preposterously to err,
Being not deficient, blind, or lame of sense,
Sans witchcraft could not.

Duke

Whoe’er he be, that in this foul proceeding,
Hath thus beguil’d your daughter of herself,
And you of her, the bloody book of law
You shall yourself read in the bitter letter,
After your own sense, yea, though our proper son
Stood in your action.

Brabantio

Humbly I thank your grace.
Here is the man, this Moor, whom now it seems
Your special mandate for the state affairs
Hath hither brought.

All

We are very sorry for ’t.

Duke

[To Othello.]

What, in your own part, can you say to this?

Brabantio

Nothing, but this is so.

Othello

Most potent, grave, and reverend signiors,
My very noble and approv’d good masters:
That I have ta’en away this old man’s daughter,
It is most true; true, I have married her.
The very head and front of my offending
Hath this extent, no more. Rude am I in my speech,
And little bless’d with the soft phrase of peace;
For since these arms of mine had seven years’ pith,
Till now some nine moons wasted, they have us’d
Their dearest action in the tented field,
And little of this great world can I speak,
More than pertains to feats of broil and battle,
And therefore little shall I grace my cause
In speaking for myself. Yet, by your gracious patience,
I will a round unvarnish’d tale deliver
Of my whole course of love: what drugs, what charms,
What conjuration, and what mighty magic,
(For such proceeding I am charged withal)
I won his daughter.

Brabantio

A maiden never bold:
Of spirit so still and quiet that her motion
Blush’d at herself; and she, in spite of nature,
Of years, of country, credit, everything,
To fall in love with what she fear’d to look on!
It is judgement maim’d and most imperfect
That will confess perfection so could err
Against all rules of nature, and must be driven
To find out practices of cunning hell,
Why this should be. I therefore vouch again,
That with some mixtures powerful o’er the blood,
Or with some dram conjur’d to this effect,
He wrought upon her.

Duke

To vouch this is no proof;
Without more wider and more overt test
Than these thin habits and poor likelihoods
Of modern seeming do prefer against him.

First Senator

But, Othello, speak:
Did you by indirect and forced courses
Subdue and poison this young maid’s affections?
Or came it by request, and such fair question
As soul to soul affordeth?

Othello

I do beseech you,
Send for the lady to the Sagittary,
And let her speak of me before her father.
If you do find me foul in her report,
The trust, the office I do hold of you,
Not only take away, but let your sentence
Even fall upon my life.

Duke

Fetch Desdemona hither.

Othello

Ancient, conduct them, you best know the place.

[Exeunt° Iago and Attendants.]

they leave
And till she come, as truly as to heaven
I do confess the vices of my blood,
So justly to your grave ears I’ll present
How I did thrive in this fair lady’s love,
And she in mine.

Duke

Say it, Othello.

Othello

Her father lov’d me, oft invited me,
Still question’d me the story of my life,
From year to year—the battles, sieges, fortunes,
That I have pass’d.
I ran it through, even from my boyish days
To the very moment that he bade me tell it,
Wherein I spake of most disastrous chances,
Of moving accidents by flood and field;
Of hair-breadth scapes i’ th’ imminent deadly breach;
Of being taken by the insolent foe,
And sold to slavery, of my redemption thence,
And portance in my traveler’s history,
Wherein of antres vast and deserts idle,
Rough quarries, rocks, and hills whose heads touch heaven,
It was my hint to speak,—such was the process;
And of the Cannibals that each other eat,
The Anthropophagi, and men whose heads
Do grow beneath their shoulders. This to hear
Would Desdemona seriously incline.
But still the house affairs would draw her thence,
Which ever as she could with haste dispatch,
She’d come again, and with a greedy ear
Devour up my discourse; which I observing,
Took once a pliant hour, and found good means
To draw from her a prayer of earnest heart
That I would all my pilgrimage dilate,
Whereof by parcels she had something heard,
But not intentively. I did consent,
And often did beguile her of her tears,
When I did speak of some distressful stroke
That my youth suffer’d. My story being done,
She gave me for my pains a world of sighs.
She swore, in faith, ’twas strange, ’twas passing strange;
’Twas pitiful, ’twas wondrous pitiful.
She wish’d she had not heard it, yet she wish’d
That heaven had made her such a man: she thank’d me,
And bade me, if I had a friend that lov’d her,
I should but teach him how to tell my story,
And that would woo her. Upon this hint I spake:
She lov’d me for the dangers I had pass’d,
And I lov’d her that she did pity them.
This only is the witchcraft I have us’d.
Here comes the lady. Let her witness it.

Enter Desdemona, Iago and Attendants.

Duke

I think this tale would win my daughter too.
Good Brabantio,
Take up this mangled matter at the best.
Men do their broken weapons rather use
Than their bare hands.

Brabantio

I pray you hear her speak.
If she confess that she was half the wooer,
Destruction on my head, if my bad blame
Light on the man!—Come hither, gentle mistress:
Do you perceive in all this noble company
Where most you owe obedience?

Desdemona

My noble father,
I do perceive here a divided duty:
To you I am bound for life and education.
My life and education both do learn me
How to respect you. You are the lord of duty,
I am hitherto your daughter: but here’s my husband.
And so much duty as my mother show’d
To you, preferring you before her father,
So much I challenge that I may profess
Due to the Moor my lord.

Brabantio

God be with you! I have done.
Please it your grace, on to the state affairs.
I had rather to adopt a child than get it.—
Come hither, Moor:
I here do give thee that with all my heart
Which, but thou hast already, with all my heart
I would keep from thee.—For your sake, jewel,
I am glad at soul I have no other child,
For thy escape would teach me tyranny,
To hang clogs on them.—I have done, my lord.

Duke

Let me speak like yourself, and lay a sentence,
Which as a grise or step may help these lovers
Into your favour.
When remedies are past, the griefs are ended
By seeing the worst, which late on hopes depended.
To mourn a mischief that is past and gone
Is the next way to draw new mischief on.
What cannot be preserved when fortune takes,
Patience her injury a mockery makes.
The robb’d that smiles steals something from the thief;
He robs himself that spends a bootless grief.

Brabantio

So let the Turk of Cyprus us beguile,
We lose it not so long as we can smile;
He bears the sentence well, that nothing bears
But the free comfort which from thence he hears;
But he bears both the sentence and the sorrow
That, to pay grief, must of poor patience borrow.
These sentences to sugar or to gall,
Being strong on both sides, are equivocal:
But words are words; I never yet did hear
That the bruis’d heart was pierced through the ear.
I humbly beseech you, proceed to the affairs of state.

Duke

The Turk with a most mighty preparation makes for Cyprus. Othello, the fortitude of the place is best known to you. And though we have there a substitute of most allowed sufficiency, yet opinion, a sovereign mistress of effects, throws a more safer voice on you: you must therefore be content to slubber the gloss of your new fortunes with this more stubborn and boisterous expedition.

Othello

The tyrant custom, most grave senators,
Hath made the flinty and steel couch of war
My thrice-driven bed of down: I do agnize
A natural and prompt alacrity
I find in hardness, and do undertake
This present wars against the Ottomites.
Most humbly, therefore, bending to your state,
I crave fit disposition for my wife,
Due reference of place and exhibition,
With such accommodation and besort
As levels with her breeding.

Duke

If you please,
Be’t at her father’s.

Brabantio

I’ll not have it so.

Othello

Nor I.

Desdemona

Nor I. I would not there reside,
To put my father in impatient thoughts,
By being in his eye. Most gracious duke,
To my unfolding lend your prosperous ear,
And let me find a charter in your voice
T’ assist my simpleness.

Duke

What would you, Desdemona?

Desdemona

That I did love the Moor to live with him,
My downright violence and storm of fortunes
May trumpet to the world: my heart’s subdued
Even to the very quality of my lord.
I saw Othello’s visage in his mind,
And to his honours and his valiant parts
Did I my soul and fortunes consecrate.
So that, dear lords, if I be left behind,
A moth of peace, and he go to the war,
The rites for which I love him are bereft me,
And I a heavy interim shall support
By his dear absence. Let me go with him.

Othello

Let her have your voice.
Vouch with me, heaven, I therefore beg it not
To please the palate of my appetite,
Nor to comply with heat, the young affects
In me defunct, and proper satisfaction,
But to be free and bounteous to her mind.
And heaven defend your good souls that you think
I will your serious and great business scant
For she is with me. No, when light-wing’d toys
Of feather’d Cupid seel with wanton dullness
My speculative and offic’d instruments,
That my disports corrupt and taint my business,
Let housewives make a skillet of my helm,
And all indign and base adversities
Make head against my estimation.

Duke

Be it as you shall privately determine,
Either for her stay or going. The affair cries haste,
And speed must answer it.

First Senator

You must away tonight.

Othello

With all my heart.

Duke

At nine i’ the morning here we’ll meet again.
Othello, leave some officer behind,
And he shall our commission bring to you,
With such things else of quality and respect
As doth import you.

Othello

So please your grace, my ancient,
A man he is of honesty and trust,
To his conveyance I assign my wife,
With what else needful your good grace shall think
To be sent after me.

Duke

Let it be so.
Good night to everyone.

[To Brabantio.]

And, noble signior,
If virtue no delighted beauty lack,
Your son-in-law is far more fair than black.

First Senator

Adieu, brave Moor, use Desdemona well.

Brabantio

Look to her, Moor, if thou hast eyes to see:
She has deceiv’d her father, and may thee.

[Exeunt° Duke, Senators, Officers, &c.]

they leave

Othello

My life upon her faith! Honest Iago,
My Desdemona must I leave to thee.
I prithee, let thy wife attend on her,
And bring them after in the best advantage.—
Come, Desdemona, I have but an hour
Of love, of worldly matters, and direction,
To spend with thee. We must obey the time.

[Exeunt° Othello and Desdemona.]

they leave

Roderigo

Iago—

Iago

What sayst thou, noble heart?

Roderigo

What will I do, thinkest thou?

Iago

Why, go to bed and sleep.

Roderigo

I will incontinently drown myself.

Iago

If thou dost, I shall never love thee after. Why, thou silly gentleman!

Roderigo

It is silliness to live, when to live is torment; and then have we a prescription to die when death is our physician.

Iago

O villainous! I have looked upon the world for four times seven years, and since I could distinguish betwixt a benefit and an injury, I never found man that knew how to love himself. Ere I would say I would drown myself for the love of a guinea-hen, I would change my humanity with a baboon.

Roderigo

What should I do? I confess it is my shame to be so fond, but it is not in my virtue to amend it.

Iago

Virtue! a fig! ’Tis in ourselves that we are thus or thus. Our bodies are gardens, to the which our wills are gardeners. So that if we will plant nettles or sow lettuce, set hyssop and weed up thyme, supply it with one gender of herbs or distract it with many, either to have it sterile with idleness or manured with industry, why, the power and corrigible authority of this lies in our wills. If the balance of our lives had not one scale of reason to poise another of sensuality, the blood and baseness of our natures would conduct us to most preposterous conclusions. But we have reason to cool our raging motions, our carnal stings, our unbitted lusts; whereof I take this, that you call love, to be a sect, or scion.

Roderigo

It cannot be.

Iago

It is merely a lust of the blood and a permission of the will. Come, be a man. Drown thyself? Drown cats and blind puppies. I have professed me thy friend, and I confess me knit to thy deserving with cables of perdurable toughness; I could never better stead thee than now. Put money in thy purse; follow thou the wars; defeat thy favour with an usurped beard; I say, put money in thy purse. It cannot be that Desdemona should long continue her love to the Moor,—put money in thy purse,—nor he his to her. It was a violent commencement, and thou shalt see an answerable sequestration—put but money in thy purse. These Moors are changeable in their wills. Fill thy purse with money. The food that to him now is as luscious as locusts shall be to him shortly as acerb as the coloquintida. She must change for youth. When she is sated with his body, she will find the error of her choice. She must have change, she must. Therefore put money in thy purse. If thou wilt needs damn thyself, do it a more delicate way than drowning. Make all the money thou canst. If sanctimony and a frail vow betwixt an erring barbarian and a supersubtle Venetian be not too hard for my wits and all the tribe of hell, thou shalt enjoy her; therefore make money. A pox of drowning thyself! It is clean out of the way: seek thou rather to be hanged in compassing thy joy than to be drowned and go without her.

Roderigo

Wilt thou be fast to my hopes if I depend on the issue?

Iago

Thou art sure of me. Go, make money. I have told thee often, and I retell thee again and again, I hate the Moor. My cause is hearted; thine hath no less reason. Let us be conjunctive in our revenge against him: if thou canst cuckold him, thou dost thyself a pleasure, me a sport. There are many events in the womb of time which will be delivered. Traverse, go, provide thy money. We will have more of this tomorrow. Adieu.

Roderigo

Where shall we meet i’ the morning?

Iago

At my lodging.

Roderigo

I’ll be with thee betimes.

Iago

Go to, farewell. Do you hear, Roderigo?

Roderigo

What say you?

Iago

No more of drowning, do you hear?

Roderigo

I am changed. I’ll sell all my land.

[Exit.]

Iago

Thus do I ever make my fool my purse.
For I mine own gain’d knowledge should profane
If I would time expend with such a snipe
But for my sport and profit. I hate the Moor,
And it is thought abroad that ’twixt my sheets
He has done my office. I know not if ’t be true,
But I, for mere suspicion in that kind,
Will do as if for surety. He holds me well,
The better shall my purpose work on him.
Cassio’s a proper man. Let me see now,
To get his place, and to plume up my will
In double knavery. How, how? Let’s see.
After some time, to abuse Othello’s ear
That he is too familiar with his wife.
He hath a person and a smooth dispose,
To be suspected, fram’d to make women false.
The Moor is of a free and open nature
That thinks men honest that but seem to be so,
And will as tenderly be led by the nose
As asses are.
I have’t. It is engender’d. Hell and night
Must bring this monstrous birth to the world’s light.

[Exit.]

ACT II

SCENE I.
A seaport in Cyprus. A Platform.

Enter Montano and two Gentlemen.

Montano

What from the cape can you discern at sea?

First Gentleman

Nothing at all, it is a high-wrought flood.
I cannot ’twixt the heaven and the main
Descry a sail.

Montano

Methinks the wind hath spoke aloud at land.
A fuller blast ne’er shook our battlements.
If it hath ruffian’d so upon the sea,
What ribs of oak, when mountains melt on them,
Can hold the mortise? What shall we hear of this?

Second Gentleman

A segregation of the Turkish fleet.
For do but stand upon the foaming shore,
The chidden billow seems to pelt the clouds,
The wind-shak’d surge, with high and monstrous main,
Seems to cast water on the burning Bear,
And quench the guards of the ever-fixed pole;
I never did like molestation view
On the enchafed flood.

Montano

If that the Turkish fleet
Be not enshelter’d, and embay’d, they are drown’d.
It is impossible to bear it out.

Enter a third Gentleman.

Third Gentleman

News, lads! Our wars are done.
The desperate tempest hath so bang’d the Turks
That their designment halts. A noble ship of Venice
Hath seen a grievous wreck and sufferance
On most part of their fleet.

Montano

How? Is this true?

Third Gentleman

The ship is here put in,
A Veronessa; Michael Cassio,
Lieutenant to the warlike Moor Othello,
Is come on shore; the Moor himself at sea,
And is in full commission here for Cyprus.

Montano

I am glad on’t. ’Tis a worthy governor.

Third Gentleman

But this same Cassio, though he speak of comfort
Touching the Turkish loss, yet he looks sadly,
And prays the Moor be safe; for they were parted
With foul and violent tempest.

Montano

Pray heavens he be;
For I have serv’d him, and the man commands
Like a full soldier. Let’s to the sea-side, ho!
As well to see the vessel that’s come in
As to throw out our eyes for brave Othello,
Even till we make the main and the aerial blue
An indistinct regard.

Third Gentleman

Come, let’s do so;
For every minute is expectancy
Of more arrivance.

Enter Cassio.

Cassio

Thanks you, the valiant of this warlike isle,
That so approve the Moor! O, let the heavens
Give him defence against the elements,
For I have lost him on a dangerous sea.

Montano

Is he well shipp’d?

Cassio

His bark is stoutly timber’d, and his pilot
Of very expert and approv’d allowance;
Therefore my hopes, not surfeited to death,
Stand in bold cure.

[Within.]

A sail, a sail, a sail!

Enter a Messenger.

Cassio

What noise?

Messenger

The town is empty; on the brow o’ the sea
Stand ranks of people, and they cry “A sail!”

Cassio

My hopes do shape him for the governor.

[A shot.]

Second Gentleman

They do discharge their shot of courtesy.
Our friends at least.

Cassio

I pray you, sir, go forth,
And give us truth who ’tis that is arriv’d.

Second Gentleman

I shall.

[Exit.]

Montano

But, good lieutenant, is your general wiv’d?

Cassio

Most fortunately: he hath achiev’d a maid
That paragons description and wild fame,
One that excels the quirks of blazoning pens,
And in the essential vesture of creation
Does tire the ingener.

Enter second Gentleman.

How now? Who has put in?

Second Gentleman

’Tis one Iago, ancient to the general.

Cassio

He has had most favourable and happy speed:
Tempests themselves, high seas, and howling winds,
The gutter’d rocks, and congregated sands,
Traitors ensteep’d to clog the guiltless keel,
As having sense of beauty, do omit
Their mortal natures, letting go safely by
The divine Desdemona.

Montano

What is she?

Cassio

She that I spake of, our great captain’s captain,
Left in the conduct of the bold Iago;
Whose footing here anticipates our thoughts
A se’nnight’s speed. Great Jove, Othello guard,
And swell his sail with thine own powerful breath,
That he may bless this bay with his tall ship,
Make love’s quick pants in Desdemona’s arms,
Give renew’d fire to our extincted spirits,
And bring all Cyprus comfort!

Enter Desdemona, Iago, Roderigo, and Emilia.

O, behold,
The riches of the ship is come on shore!
Ye men of Cyprus, let her have your knees.
Hail to thee, lady! and the grace of heaven,
Before, behind thee, and on every hand,
Enwheel thee round!

Desdemona

I thank you, valiant Cassio.
What tidings can you tell me of my lord?

Cassio

He is not yet arrived, nor know I aught
But that he’s well, and will be shortly here.

Desdemona

O, but I fear—How lost you company?

[Within.]

A sail, a sail!

Cassio

The great contention of the sea and skies
Parted our fellowship. But, hark! a sail.

[Guns within.]

Second Gentleman

They give their greeting to the citadel.
This likewise is a friend.

Cassio

See for the news.

[Exit Gentleman.]

Good ancient, you are welcome.

[To Emilia.]

Welcome, mistress.
Let it not gall your patience, good Iago,
That I extend my manners; ’tis my breeding
That gives me this bold show of courtesy.

[Kissing her.]

Iago

Sir, would she give you so much of her lips
As of her tongue she oft bestows on me,
You would have enough.

Desdemona

Alas, she has no speech.

Iago

In faith, too much.
I find it still when I have list to sleep.
Marry, before your ladyship, I grant,
She puts her tongue a little in her heart,
And chides with thinking.

Emilia

You have little cause to say so.

Iago

Come on, come on; you are pictures out of doors,
Bells in your parlours, wild-cats in your kitchens,
Saints in your injuries, devils being offended,
Players in your housewifery, and housewives in your beds.

Desdemona

O, fie upon thee, slanderer!

Iago

Nay, it is true, or else I am a Turk.
You rise to play, and go to bed to work.

Emilia

You shall not write my praise.

Iago

No, let me not.

Desdemona

What wouldst thou write of me, if thou shouldst praise me?

Iago

O gentle lady, do not put me to’t,
For I am nothing if not critical.

Desdemona

Come on, assay.—There’s one gone to the harbour?

Iago

Ay, madam.

Desdemona

I am not merry, but I do beguile
The thing I am, by seeming otherwise.—
Come, how wouldst thou praise me?

Iago

I am about it, but indeed, my invention
Comes from my pate as birdlime does from frieze,
It plucks out brains and all: but my Muse labours,
And thus she is deliver’d.
If she be fair and wise, fairness and wit,
The one’s for use, the other useth it.

Desdemona

Well prais’d! How if she be black and witty?

Iago

If she be black, and thereto have a wit,
She’ll find a white that shall her blackness fit.

Desdemona

Worse and worse.

Emilia

How if fair and foolish?

Iago

She never yet was foolish that was fair,
For even her folly help’d her to an heir.

Desdemona

These are old fond paradoxes to make fools laugh i’ the alehouse. What miserable praise hast thou for her that’s foul and foolish?

Iago

There’s none so foul and foolish thereunto,
But does foul pranks which fair and wise ones do.

Desdemona

O heavy ignorance! Thou praisest the worst best. But what praise couldst thou bestow on a deserving woman indeed, one that in the authority of her merit did justly put on the vouch of very malice itself?

Iago

She that was ever fair and never proud,
Had tongue at will and yet was never loud,
Never lack’d gold and yet went never gay,
Fled from her wish, and yet said, “Now I may”;
She that, being anger’d, her revenge being nigh,
Bade her wrong stay and her displeasure fly;
She that in wisdom never was so frail
To change the cod’s head for the salmon’s tail;
She that could think and ne’er disclose her mind,
See suitors following and not look behind;
She was a wight, if ever such wight were—

Desdemona

To do what?

Iago

To suckle fools and chronicle small beer.

Desdemona

O most lame and impotent conclusion!—Do not learn of him, Emilia, though he be thy husband.—How say you, Cassio? is he not a most profane and liberal counsellor?

Cassio

He speaks home, madam. You may relish him more in the soldier than in the scholar.

Iago

[Aside.]

He takes her by the palm. Ay, well said, whisper. With as little a web as this will I ensnare as great a fly as Cassio. Ay, smile upon her, do. I will gyve thee in thine own courtship. You say true, ’tis so, indeed. If such tricks as these strip you out of your lieutenantry, it had been better you had not kissed your three fingers so oft, which now again you are most apt to play the sir in. Very good; well kissed, an excellent courtesy! ’Tis so, indeed. Yet again your fingers to your lips? Would they were clyster-pipes for your sake! [Trumpets within.]

The Moor! I know his trumpet.

Cassio

’Tis truly so.

Desdemona

Let’s meet him, and receive him.

Cassio

Lo, where he comes! Enter Othello and Attendants.

Othello

O my fair warrior!

Desdemona

My dear Othello!

Othello

It gives me wonder great as my content
To see you here before me. O my soul’s joy!
If after every tempest come such calms,
May the winds blow till they have waken’d death!
And let the labouring bark climb hills of seas
Olympus-high, and duck again as low
As hell’s from heaven! If it were now to die,
’Twere now to be most happy, for I fear
My soul hath her content so absolute
That not another comfort like to this
Succeeds in unknown fate.

Desdemona

The heavens forbid
But that our loves and comforts should increase
Even as our days do grow!

Othello

Amen to that, sweet powers!
I cannot speak enough of this content.
It stops me here; it is too much of joy:
And this, and this, the greatest discords be.

[They kiss.]

That e’er our hearts shall make!

Iago

[Aside.]

O, you are well tun’d now,
But I’ll set down the pegs that make this music,
As honest as I am.

Othello

Come, let us to the castle.—
News, friends, our wars are done, the Turks are drown’d.
How does my old acquaintance of this isle?
Honey, you shall be well desir’d in Cyprus;
I have found great love amongst them. O my sweet,
I prattle out of fashion, and I dote
In mine own comforts.—I prithee, good Iago,
Go to the bay and disembark my coffers.
Bring thou the master to the citadel;
He is a good one, and his worthiness
Does challenge much respect.—Come, Desdemona,
Once more well met at Cyprus.

[Exeunt° Othello, Desdemona and Attendants.]

they leave

Iago

Do thou meet me presently at the harbour. Come hither. If thou be’st valiant—as, they say, base men being in love have then a nobility in their natures more than is native to them—list me. The lieutenant tonight watches on the court of guard: first, I must tell thee this: Desdemona is directly in love with him.

Roderigo

With him? Why, ’tis not possible.

Iago

Lay thy finger thus, and let thy soul be instructed. Mark me with what violence she first loved the Moor, but for bragging, and telling her fantastical lies. And will she love him still for prating? Let not thy discreet heart think it. Her eye must be fed. And what delight shall she have to look on the devil? When the blood is made dull with the act of sport, there should be, again to inflame it and to give satiety a fresh appetite, loveliness in favour, sympathy in years, manners, and beauties; all which the Moor is defective in: now, for want of these required conveniences, her delicate tenderness will find itself abused, begin to heave the gorge, disrelish and abhor the Moor, very nature will instruct her in it, and compel her to some second choice. Now sir, this granted (as it is a most pregnant and unforced position) who stands so eminently in the degree of this fortune as Cassio does? a knave very voluble; no further conscionable than in putting on the mere form of civil and humane seeming, for the better compassing of his salt and most hidden loose affection? Why, none, why, none! A slipper and subtle knave, a finder out of occasions; that has an eye can stamp and counterfeit advantages, though true advantage never present itself: a devilish knave! Besides, the knave is handsome, young, and hath all those requisites in him that folly and green minds look after. A pestilent complete knave, and the woman hath found him already.

Roderigo

I cannot believe that in her, she is full of most blessed condition.

Iago

Blest fig’s end! the wine she drinks is made of grapes: if she had been blessed, she would never have loved the Moor. Blessed pudding! Didst thou not see her paddle with the palm of his hand? Didst not mark that?

Roderigo

Yes, that I did. But that was but courtesy.

Iago

Lechery, by this hand. An index and obscure prologue to the history of lust and foul thoughts. They met so near with their lips that their breaths embrac’d together. Villainous thoughts, Roderigo! When these mutualities so marshal the way, hard at hand comes the master and main exercise, the incorporate conclusion. Pish! But, sir, be you ruled by me. I have brought you from Venice. Watch you tonight. For the command, I’ll lay’t upon you. Cassio knows you not. I’ll not be far from you. Do you find some occasion to anger Cassio, either by speaking too loud, or tainting his discipline, or from what other course you please, which the time shall more favourably minister.

Roderigo

Well.

Iago

Sir, he is rash, and very sudden in choler, and haply with his truncheon may strike at you: provoke him that he may, for even out of that will I cause these of Cyprus to mutiny, whose qualification shall come into no true taste again but by the displanting of Cassio. So shall you have a shorter journey to your desires by the means I shall then have to prefer them, and the impediment most profitably removed, without the which there were no expectation of our prosperity.

Roderigo

I will do this, if I can bring it to any opportunity.

Iago

I warrant thee. Meet me by and by at the citadel: I must fetch his necessaries ashore. Farewell.

Roderigo

Adieu.

[Exit.]

Iago

That Cassio loves her, I do well believe it;
That she loves him, ’tis apt, and of great credit:
The Moor, howbeit that I endure him not,
Is of a constant, loving, noble nature;
And, I dare think, he’ll prove to Desdemona
A most dear husband. Now, I do love her too,
Not out of absolute lust (though peradventure
I stand accountant for as great a sin)
But partly led to diet my revenge,
For that I do suspect the lusty Moor
Hath leap’d into my seat. The thought whereof
Doth, like a poisonous mineral, gnaw my inwards,
And nothing can or shall content my soul
Till I am even’d with him, wife for wife,
Or, failing so, yet that I put the Moor
At least into a jealousy so strong
That judgement cannot cure. Which thing to do,
If this poor trash of Venice, whom I trash
For his quick hunting, stand the putting on,
I’ll have our Michael Cassio on the hip,
Abuse him to the Moor in the rank garb
(For I fear Cassio with my night-cap too)
Make the Moor thank me, love me, and reward me
For making him egregiously an ass
And practicing upon his peace and quiet
Even to madness. ’Tis here, but yet confus’d.
Knavery’s plain face is never seen till us’d.

[Exit.]

ACT II, SCENE II.
A street.

Enter Othello’s Herald with a proclamation.

Herald

It is Othello’s pleasure, our noble and valiant general, that upon certain tidings now arrived, importing the mere perdition of the Turkish fleet, every man put himself into triumph: some to dance, some to make bonfires, each man to what sport and revels his addition leads him. For besides these beneficial news, it is the celebration of his nuptial. So much was his pleasure should be proclaimed. All offices are open, and there is full liberty of feasting from this present hour of five till the bell have told eleven. Heaven bless the isle of Cyprus and our noble general Othello! perdition = loss

[Exit.]

ACT II, SCENE III.
A Hall in the Castle.

Enter Othello, Desdemona, Cassio and Attendants.

Othello

Good Michael, look you to the guard tonight.
Let’s teach ourselves that honourable stop,
Not to outsport discretion.

Cassio

Iago hath direction what to do.
But notwithstanding with my personal eye
Will I look to’t.

Othello

Iago is most honest.
Michael, good night. Tomorrow with your earliest
Let me have speech with you.

[To Desdemona.]

Come, my dear love,
The purchase made, the fruits are to ensue;
That profit’s yet to come ’tween me and you.—
Good night.

[Exeunt° Othello, Desdemona and Attendants.]

they leave

Enter Iago.

Cassio

Welcome, Iago. We must to the watch.

Iago

Not this hour, lieutenant. ’Tis not yet ten o’ th’ clock. Our general cast us thus early for the love of his Desdemona; who let us not therefore blame: he hath not yet made wanton the night with her; and she is sport for Jove.

Cassio

She’s a most exquisite lady.

Iago

And, I’ll warrant her, full of game.

Cassio

Indeed, she is a most fresh and delicate creature.

Iago

What an eye she has! methinks it sounds a parley to provocation. it seems to me — invites a challenge

Cassio

An inviting eye, and yet methinks right modest. it seems to me

Iago

And when she speaks, is it not an alarm to love?

Cassio

She is indeed perfection.

Iago

Well, happiness to their sheets! Come, lieutenant, I have a stoup of wine; and here without are a brace of Cyprus gallants that would fain have a measure to the health of black Othello.

Cassio

Not tonight, good Iago. I have very poor and unhappy brains for drinking. I could well wish courtesy would invent some other custom of entertainment.

Iago

O, they are our friends; but one cup: I’ll drink for you.

Cassio

I have drunk but one cup tonight, and that was craftily qualified too, and behold, what innovation it makes here: I am unfortunate in the infirmity, and dare not task my weakness with any more.

Iago

What, man! ’Tis a night of revels. The gallants desire it.

Cassio

Where are they?

Iago

Here at the door. I pray you, call them in.

Cassio

I’ll do’t; but it dislikes me.

[Exit.]

Iago

If I can fasten but one cup upon him,
With that which he hath drunk tonight already,
He’ll be as full of quarrel and offence
As my young mistress’ dog. Now my sick fool Roderigo,
Whom love hath turn’d almost the wrong side out,
To Desdemona hath tonight carous’d
Potations pottle-deep; and he’s to watch:
Three lads of Cyprus, noble swelling spirits,
That hold their honours in a wary distance,
The very elements of this warlike isle,
Have I tonight fluster’d with flowing cups,
And they watch too. Now, ’mongst this flock of drunkards,
Am I to put our Cassio in some action
That may offend the isle. But here they come:
If consequence do but approve my dream,
My boat sails freely, both with wind and stream.

Enter Cassio, Montano and Gentlemen; followed by Servant with wine.

Cassio

’Fore God, they have given me a rouse already.

Montano

Good faith, a little one; not past a pint, as I am a soldier.

Iago

Some wine, ho!

[Sings.]

    And let me the cannikin clink, clink,
    And let me the cannikin clink, clink:
     A soldier’s a man,
     O, man’s life’s but a span,
    Why then let a soldier drink.
Some wine, boys!

Cassio

’Fore God, an excellent song.

Iago

I learned it in England, where indeed they are most potent in potting: your Dane, your German, and your swag-bellied Hollander,—drink, ho!—are nothing to your English.

Cassio

Is your Englishman so expert in his drinking?

Iago

Why, he drinks you, with facility, your Dane dead drunk; he sweats not to overthrow your Almain; he gives your Hollander a vomit ere the next pottle can be filled.

Cassio

To the health of our general!

Montano

I am for it, lieutenant; and I’ll do you justice.

Iago

O sweet England!

[Sings.]

    King Stephen was a worthy peer,
     His breeches cost him but a crown;
    He held them sixpence all too dear,
     With that he call’d the tailor lown.
    He was a wight of high renown,
     And thou art but of low degree:
    ’Tis pride that pulls the country down,
     Then take thine auld cloak about thee.
Some wine, ho!

Cassio

’Fore God, this is a more exquisite song than the other.

Iago

Will you hear ’t again?

Cassio

No, for I hold him to be unworthy of his place that does those things. Well, God’s above all, and there be souls must be saved, and there be souls must not be saved.

Iago

It’s true, good lieutenant.

Cassio

For mine own part, no offence to the general, nor any man of quality, I hope to be saved.

Iago

And so do I too, lieutenant.

Cassio

Ay, but, by your leave, not before me; the lieutenant is to be saved before the ancient. Let’s have no more of this; let’s to our affairs. Forgive us our sins! Gentlemen, let’s look to our business. Do not think, gentlemen, I am drunk. This is my ancient, this is my right hand, and this is my left. I am not drunk now. I can stand well enough, and I speak well enough.

All

Excellent well.

Cassio

Why, very well then. You must not think, then, that I am drunk.

[Exit.]

Montano

To the platform, masters. Come, let’s set the watch.

Iago

You see this fellow that is gone before,
He is a soldier fit to stand by Cæsar
And give direction: and do but see his vice,
’Tis to his virtue a just equinox,
The one as long as th’ other. ’Tis pity of him.
I fear the trust Othello puts him in,
On some odd time of his infirmity,
Will shake this island.

Montano

But is he often thus?

Iago

’Tis evermore the prologue to his sleep:
He’ll watch the horologe a double set
If drink rock not his cradle.

Montano

It were well
The general were put in mind of it.
Perhaps he sees it not, or his good nature
Prizes the virtue that appears in Cassio,
And looks not on his evils: is not this true?

Enter Roderigo

Iago

[Aside to him.]

How now, Roderigo?
I pray you, after the lieutenant; go.

[Exit Roderigo.]

Montano

And ’tis great pity that the noble Moor
Should hazard such a place as his own second
With one of an ingraft infirmity:
It were an honest action to say so
To the Moor.

Iago

Not I, for this fair island.
I do love Cassio well and would do much
To cure him of this evil. But, hark! What noise?

[Cry within: “Help! help!”] Enter Cassio, driving in Roderigo.

Cassio

Zounds, you rogue, you rascal!

Montano

What’s the matter, lieutenant?

Cassio

A knave teach me my duty! I’ll beat the knave into a twiggen bottle.

Roderigo

Beat me?

Cassio

Dost thou prate, rogue?

[Striking Roderigo.]

Montano

Nay, good lieutenant;
I pray you, sir, hold your hand.

Cassio

Let me go, sir,
Or I’ll knock you o’er the mazard.

Montano

Come, come, you’re drunk.

Cassio

Drunk?

[They fight.]

Iago

[Aside to Roderigo.] Away, I say! Go out and cry a mutiny.

[Exit Roderigo.] Nay, good lieutenant, God’s will, gentlemen.

Help, ho!—Lieutenant,—sir,—Montano,—sir:—
Help, masters! Here’s a goodly watch indeed! [A bell rings.]

Who’s that which rings the bell?—Diablo, ho!
The town will rise. God’s will, lieutenant, hold,
You will be sham’d forever.

Enter Othello and Attendants.

Othello

What is the matter here?

Montano

Zounds, I bleed still, I am hurt to the death.

Othello

Hold, for your lives!

Iago

Hold, ho! lieutenant,—sir,—Montano,—gentlemen,—
Have you forgot all place of sense and duty?
Hold! The general speaks to you; hold, hold, for shame!

Othello

Why, how now, ho! From whence ariseth this?
Are we turn’d Turks, and to ourselves do that
Which heaven hath forbid the Ottomites?
For Christian shame, put by this barbarous brawl:
He that stirs next to carve for his own rage
Holds his soul light; he dies upon his motion.
Silence that dreadful bell, it frights the isle
From her propriety. What is the matter, masters?
Honest Iago, that looks dead with grieving,
Speak, who began this? On thy love, I charge thee.

Iago

I do not know. Friends all but now, even now,
In quarter, and in terms like bride and groom
Devesting them for bed; and then, but now,
As if some planet had unwitted men,
Swords out, and tilting one at other’s breast,
In opposition bloody. I cannot speak
Any beginning to this peevish odds;
And would in action glorious I had lost
Those legs that brought me to a part of it!

Othello

How comes it, Michael, you are thus forgot?

Cassio

I pray you, pardon me; I cannot speak.

Othello

Worthy Montano, you were wont be civil.
The gravity and stillness of your youth
The world hath noted, and your name is great
In mouths of wisest censure: what’s the matter,
That you unlace your reputation thus,
And spend your rich opinion for the name
Of a night-brawler? Give me answer to it.

Montano

Worthy Othello, I am hurt to danger.
Your officer, Iago, can inform you,
While I spare speech, which something now offends me,
Of all that I do know; nor know I aught
By me that’s said or done amiss this night,
Unless self-charity be sometimes a vice,
And to defend ourselves it be a sin
When violence assails us.

Othello

Now, by heaven,
My blood begins my safer guides to rule,
And passion, having my best judgement collied,
Assays to lead the way. Zounds, if I stir,
Or do but lift this arm, the best of you
Shall sink in my rebuke. Give me to know
How this foul rout began, who set it on,
And he that is approv’d in this offence,
Though he had twinn’d with me, both at a birth,
Shall lose me. What! in a town of war,
Yet wild, the people’s hearts brimful of fear,
To manage private and domestic quarrel,
In night, and on the court and guard of safety?
’Tis monstrous. Iago, who began’t?

Montano

If partially affin’d, or leagu’d in office,
Thou dost deliver more or less than truth,
Thou art no soldier.

Iago

Touch me not so near.
I had rather have this tongue cut from my mouth
Than it should do offence to Michael Cassio.
Yet I persuade myself, to speak the truth
Shall nothing wrong him. Thus it is, general:
Montano and myself being in speech,
There comes a fellow crying out for help,
And Cassio following him with determin’d sword,
To execute upon him. Sir, this gentleman
Steps in to Cassio and entreats his pause.
Myself the crying fellow did pursue,
Lest by his clamour (as it so fell out)
The town might fall in fright: he, swift of foot,
Outran my purpose: and I return’d the rather
For that I heard the clink and fall of swords,
And Cassio high in oath, which till tonight
I ne’er might say before. When I came back,
(For this was brief) I found them close together,
At blow and thrust, even as again they were
When you yourself did part them.
More of this matter cannot I report.
But men are men; the best sometimes forget;
Though Cassio did some little wrong to him,
As men in rage strike those that wish them best,
Yet surely Cassio, I believe, receiv’d
From him that fled some strange indignity,
Which patience could not pass.

Othello

I know, Iago,
Thy honesty and love doth mince this matter,
Making it light to Cassio. Cassio, I love thee,
But never more be officer of mine.

Enter Desdemona, attended.

Look, if my gentle love be not rais’d up!
I’ll make thee an example.

Desdemona

What’s the matter?

Othello

All’s well now, sweeting; come away to bed.
Sir, for your hurts, myself will be your surgeon.
Lead him off.

[Montano is led off.]

Iago, look with care about the town,
And silence those whom this vile brawl distracted.
Come, Desdemona: ’tis the soldiers’ life
To have their balmy slumbers wak’d with strife.

[Exeunt° all but Iago and Cassio.]

they leave

Iago

What, are you hurt, lieutenant?

Cassio

Ay, past all surgery.

Iago

Marry, Heaven forbid!

Cassio

Reputation, reputation, reputation! O, I have lost my reputation! I have lost the immortal part of myself, and what remains is bestial. My reputation, Iago, my reputation!

Iago

As I am an honest man, I thought you had received some bodily wound; there is more sense in that than in reputation. Reputation is an idle and most false imposition, oft got without merit and lost without deserving. You have lost no reputation at all, unless you repute yourself such a loser. What, man, there are ways to recover the general again: you are but now cast in his mood, a punishment more in policy than in malice, even so as one would beat his offenceless dog to affright an imperious lion: sue to him again, and he’s yours.

Cassio

I will rather sue to be despised than to deceive so good a commander with so slight, so drunken, and so indiscreet an officer. Drunk? and speak parrot? and squabble? swagger? swear? and discourse fustian with one’s own shadow? O thou invisible spirit of wine, if thou hast no name to be known by, let us call thee devil!

Iago

What was he that you followed with your sword? What had he done to you?

Cassio

I know not.

Iago

Is’t possible?

Cassio

I remember a mass of things, but nothing distinctly; a quarrel, but nothing wherefore. O God, that men should put an enemy in their mouths to steal away their brains! That we should with joy, pleasance, revel, and applause, transform ourselves into beasts!

Iago

Why, but you are now well enough: how came you thus recovered?

Cassio

It hath pleased the devil drunkenness to give place to the devil wrath. One unperfectness shows me another, to make me frankly despise myself.

Iago

Come, you are too severe a moraler. As the time, the place, and the condition of this country stands, I could heartily wish this had not befallen; but since it is as it is, mend it for your own good.

Cassio

I will ask him for my place again; he shall tell me I am a drunkard! Had I as many mouths as Hydra, such an answer would stop them all. To be now a sensible man, by and by a fool, and presently a beast! O strange! Every inordinate cup is unbless’d, and the ingredient is a devil.

Iago

Come, come, good wine is a good familiar creature, if it be well used. Exclaim no more against it. And, good lieutenant, I think you think I love you.

Cassio

I have well approved it, sir.—I drunk!

Iago

You, or any man living, may be drunk at a time, man. I’ll tell you what you shall do. Our general’s wife is now the general; I may say so in this respect, for that he hath devoted and given up himself to the contemplation, mark, and denotement of her parts and graces. Confess yourself freely to her. Importune her help to put you in your place again. She is of so free, so kind, so apt, so blessed a disposition, she holds it a vice in her goodness not to do more than she is requested. This broken joint between you and her husband entreat her to splinter, and, my fortunes against any lay worth naming, this crack of your love shall grow stronger than it was before.

Cassio

You advise me well.

Iago

I protest, in the sincerity of love and honest kindness.

Cassio

I think it freely; and betimes in the morning I will beseech the virtuous Desdemona to undertake for me; I am desperate of my fortunes if they check me here.

Iago

You are in the right. Good night, lieutenant, I must to the watch.

Cassio

Good night, honest Iago.

[Exit.]

Iago

And what’s he then, that says I play the villain?
When this advice is free I give and honest,
Probal to thinking, and indeed the course
To win the Moor again? For ’tis most easy
The inclining Desdemona to subdue
In any honest suit. She’s fram’d as fruitful
As the free elements. And then for her
To win the Moor, were’t to renounce his baptism,
All seals and symbols of redeemed sin,
His soul is so enfetter’d to her love
That she may make, unmake, do what she list,
Even as her appetite shall play the god
With his weak function. How am I then, a villain
To counsel Cassio to this parallel course,
Directly to his good? Divinity of hell!
When devils will the blackest sins put on,
They do suggest at first with heavenly shows,
As I do now: for whiles this honest fool
Plies Desdemona to repair his fortune,
And she for him pleads strongly to the Moor,
I’ll pour this pestilence into his ear,
That she repeals him for her body’s lust;
And by how much she strives to do him good,
She shall undo her credit with the Moor.
So will I turn her virtue into pitch,
And out of her own goodness make the net
That shall enmesh them all.

Enter Roderigo.

How now, Roderigo?

Roderigo

I do follow here in the chase, not like a hound that hunts, but one that fills up the cry. My money is almost spent, I have been tonight exceedingly well cudgelled; and I think the issue will be, I shall have so much experience for my pains, and so, with no money at all and a little more wit, return again to Venice.

Iago

How poor are they that have not patience!
What wound did ever heal but by degrees?
Thou know’st we work by wit, and not by witchcraft,
And wit depends on dilatory time.
Does’t not go well? Cassio hath beaten thee,
And thou, by that small hurt, hast cashier’d Cassio;
Though other things grow fair against the sun,
Yet fruits that blossom first will first be ripe.
Content thyself awhile. By the mass, ’tis morning;
Pleasure and action make the hours seem short.
Retire thee; go where thou art billeted.
Away, I say, thou shalt know more hereafter.
Nay, get thee gone.

[Exit Roderigo.] Two things are to be done,

My wife must move for Cassio to her mistress.
I’ll set her on;
Myself the while to draw the Moor apart,
And bring him jump when he may Cassio find
Soliciting his wife. Ay, that’s the way.
Dull not device by coldness and delay.

[Exit.]

ACT III

SCENE I.
Cyprus. Before the Castle.

Enter Cassio and some Musicians.

Cassio

Masters, play here, I will content your pains,
Something that’s brief; and bid “Good morrow, general.” [Music.]

Enter Clown.

Clown

Why, masters, have your instruments been in Naples, that they speak i’ the nose thus?

FIRST MUSICIAN.

How, sir, how?

Clown

Are these, I pray you, wind instruments?

FIRST MUSICIAN.

Ay, marry, are they, sir.

Clown

O, thereby hangs a tail.

First Musician

Whereby hangs a tale, sir?

Clown

Marry, sir, by many a wind instrument that I know. But, masters, here’s money for you: and the general so likes your music, that he desires you, for love’s sake, to make no more noise with it.

First Musician

Well, sir, we will not.

Clown

If you have any music that may not be heard, to’t again. But, as they say, to hear music the general does not greatly care.

First Musician

We have none such, sir.

Clown

Then put up your pipes in your bag, for I’ll away. Go, vanish into air, away!

[Exeunt° Musicians.]

they leave

Cassio

Dost thou hear, mine honest friend?

Clown

No, I hear not your honest friend. I hear you.

Cassio

Prithee, keep up thy quillets. There’s a poor piece of gold for thee: if the gentlewoman that attends the general’s wife be stirring, tell her there’s one Cassio entreats her a little favour of speech. Wilt thou do this?

Clown

She is stirring, sir; if she will stir hither, I shall seem to notify unto her.

Cassio

Do, good my friend.

[Exit Clown.]

Enter Iago.

In happy time, Iago.

Iago

You have not been a-bed, then?

Cassio

Why, no. The day had broke
Before we parted. I have made bold, Iago,
To send in to your wife. My suit to her
Is, that she will to virtuous Desdemona
Procure me some access.

Iago

I’ll send her to you presently,
And I’ll devise a mean to draw the Moor
Out of the way, that your converse and business
May be more free.

Cassio

I humbly thank you for’t.

[Exit Iago.]

I never knew
A Florentine more kind and honest.

Enter Emilia.

Emilia

Good morrow, good lieutenant; I am sorry
For your displeasure, but all will sure be well.
The general and his wife are talking of it,
And she speaks for you stoutly: the Moor replies
That he you hurt is of great fame in Cyprus
And great affinity, and that in wholesome wisdom
He might not but refuse you; but he protests he loves you
And needs no other suitor but his likings
To take the safest occasion by the front
To bring you in again.

Cassio

Yet, I beseech you,
If you think fit, or that it may be done,
Give me advantage of some brief discourse
With Desdemona alone.

Emilia

Pray you, come in.
I will bestow you where you shall have time
To speak your bosom freely.

Cassio

I am much bound to you.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT III, SCENE II.
Cyprus. A Room in the Castle.

Enter Othello, Iago and Gentlemen.

Othello

These letters give, Iago, to the pilot,
And by him do my duties to the senate.
That done, I will be walking on the works,
Repair there to me.

Iago

Well, my good lord, I’ll do’t.

Othello

This fortification, gentlemen, shall we see’t?

GENTLEMEN.

We’ll wait upon your lordship.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT III, SCENE III.
Cyprus. The Garden of the Castle.

Enter Desdemona, Cassio and Emilia.

Desdemona

Be thou assured, good Cassio, I will do
All my abilities in thy behalf.

Emilia

Good madam, do. I warrant it grieves my husband
As if the cause were his.

Desdemona

O, that’s an honest fellow. Do not doubt, Cassio,
But I will have my lord and you again
As friendly as you were.

Cassio

Bounteous madam,
Whatever shall become of Michael Cassio,
He’s never anything but your true servant.

Desdemona

I know’t. I thank you. You do love my lord.
You have known him long; and be you well assur’d
He shall in strangeness stand no farther off
Than in a politic distance.

Cassio

Ay, but, lady,
That policy may either last so long,
Or feed upon such nice and waterish diet,
Or breed itself so out of circumstance,
That, I being absent, and my place supplied,
My general will forget my love and service.

Desdemona

Do not doubt that. Before Emilia here
I give thee warrant of thy place. Assure thee,
If I do vow a friendship, I’ll perform it
To the last article. My lord shall never rest,
I’ll watch him tame, and talk him out of patience;
His bed shall seem a school, his board a shrift;
I’ll intermingle everything he does
With Cassio’s suit. Therefore be merry, Cassio,
For thy solicitor shall rather die
Than give thy cause away.

Enter Othello and Iago.

Emilia

Madam, here comes my lord.

Cassio

Madam, I’ll take my leave.

Desdemona

Why, stay, and hear me speak.

Cassio

Madam, not now. I am very ill at ease,
Unfit for mine own purposes.

Desdemona

Well, do your discretion.

[Exit Cassio.]

Iago

Ha, I like not that.

Othello

What dost thou say?

Iago

Nothing, my lord; or if—I know not what.

Othello

Was not that Cassio parted from my wife?

Iago

Cassio, my lord? No, sure, I cannot think it,
That he would steal away so guilty-like,
Seeing you coming.

Othello

I do believe ’twas he.

Desdemona

How now, my lord?
I have been talking with a suitor here,
A man that languishes in your displeasure.

Othello

Who is’t you mean?

Desdemona

Why, your lieutenant, Cassio. Good my lord,
If I have any grace or power to move you,
His present reconciliation take;
For if he be not one that truly loves you,
That errs in ignorance and not in cunning,
I have no judgement in an honest face.
I prithee call him back.

Othello

Went he hence now?

Desdemona

Ay, sooth; so humbled
That he hath left part of his grief with me
To suffer with him. Good love, call him back.

Othello

Not now, sweet Desdemon, some other time.

Desdemona

But shall’t be shortly?

Othello

The sooner, sweet, for you.

Desdemona

Shall’t be tonight at supper?

Othello

No, not tonight.

Desdemona

Tomorrow dinner then?

Othello

I shall not dine at home;
I meet the captains at the citadel.

Desdemona

Why then tomorrow night, or Tuesday morn,
On Tuesday noon, or night; on Wednesday morn.
I prithee name the time, but let it not
Exceed three days. In faith, he’s penitent;
And yet his trespass, in our common reason,
(Save that, they say, the wars must make examples
Out of their best) is not almost a fault
To incur a private check. When shall he come?
Tell me, Othello: I wonder in my soul,
What you would ask me, that I should deny,
Or stand so mammering on. What? Michael Cassio,
That came a-wooing with you, and so many a time,
When I have spoke of you dispraisingly,
Hath ta’en your part, to have so much to do
To bring him in! Trust me, I could do much.

Othello

Prithee no more. Let him come when he will;
I will deny thee nothing.

Desdemona

Why, this is not a boon;
’Tis as I should entreat you wear your gloves,
Or feed on nourishing dishes, or keep you warm,
Or sue to you to do a peculiar profit
To your own person: nay, when I have a suit
Wherein I mean to touch your love indeed,
It shall be full of poise and difficult weight,
And fearful to be granted.

Othello

I will deny thee nothing.
Whereon, I do beseech thee, grant me this,
To leave me but a little to myself.

Desdemona

Shall I deny you? No, farewell, my lord.

Othello

Farewell, my Desdemona. I’ll come to thee straight.

Desdemona

Emilia, come. Be as your fancies teach you.
Whate’er you be, I am obedient.

[Exit with Emilia.]

Othello

Excellent wretch! Perdition° catch my soul, damnation
But I do love thee! And when I love thee not,
Chaos is come again.

Iago

My noble lord,—

Othello

What dost thou say, Iago?

Iago

Did Michael Cassio, when you woo’d my lady,
Know of your love?

Othello

He did, from first to last. Why dost thou ask?

Iago

But for a satisfaction of my thought.
No further harm.

Othello

Why of thy thought, Iago?

Iago

I did not think he had been acquainted with her.

Othello

O yes, and went between us very oft.

Iago

Indeed?

Othello

Indeed? Ay, indeed. Discern’st thou aught in that?
Is he not honest?

Iago

Honest, my lord?

Othello

Honest? ay, honest.

Iago

My lord, for aught I know.

Othello

What dost thou think?

Iago

Think, my lord?

Othello

Think, my lord? By heaven, he echoes me,
As if there were some monster in his thought
Too hideous to be shown. Thou dost mean something.
I heard thee say even now, thou lik’st not that,
When Cassio left my wife. What didst not like?
And when I told thee he was of my counsel
In my whole course of wooing, thou criedst, “Indeed?”
And didst contract and purse thy brow together,
As if thou then hadst shut up in thy brain
Some horrible conceit: if thou dost love me,
Show me thy thought.

Iago

My lord, you know I love you.

Othello

I think thou dost;
And for I know thou’rt full of love and honesty
And weigh’st thy words before thou giv’st them breath,
Therefore these stops of thine fright me the more:
For such things in a false disloyal knave
Are tricks of custom; but in a man that’s just,
They’re close dilations, working from the heart,
That passion cannot rule.

Iago

For Michael Cassio,
I dare be sworn I think that he is honest.

Othello

I think so too.

Iago

Men should be what they seem;
Or those that be not, would they might seem none!

Othello

Certain, men should be what they seem.

Iago

Why then, I think Cassio’s an honest man.

Othello

Nay, yet there’s more in this:
I prithee, speak to me as to thy thinkings,
As thou dost ruminate, and give thy worst of thoughts
The worst of words.

Iago

Good my lord, pardon me.
Though I am bound to every act of duty,
I am not bound to that all slaves are free to.
Utter my thoughts? Why, say they are vile and false:
As where’s that palace whereinto foul things
Sometimes intrude not? Who has a breast so pure
But some uncleanly apprehensions
Keep leets and law-days, and in session sit
With meditations lawful?

Othello

Thou dost conspire against thy friend, Iago,
If thou but think’st him wrong’d and mak’st his ear
A stranger to thy thoughts.

Iago

I do beseech you,
Though I perchance am vicious in my guess,
As, I confess, it is my nature’s plague
To spy into abuses, and of my jealousy
Shapes faults that are not,—that your wisdom
From one that so imperfectly conceits,
Would take no notice; nor build yourself a trouble
Out of his scattering and unsure observance.
It were not for your quiet nor your good,
Nor for my manhood, honesty, or wisdom,
To let you know my thoughts.

Othello

What dost thou mean?

Iago

Good name in man and woman, dear my lord,
Is the immediate jewel of their souls.
Who steals my purse steals trash. ’Tis something, nothing;
’Twas mine, ’tis his, and has been slave to thousands.
But he that filches from me my good name
Robs me of that which not enriches him
And makes me poor indeed.

Othello

By heaven, I’ll know thy thoughts.

Iago

You cannot, if my heart were in your hand,
Nor shall not, whilst ’tis in my custody.

Othello

Ha?

Iago

O, beware, my lord, of jealousy;
It is the green-ey’d monster which doth mock
The meat it feeds on. That cuckold lives in bliss
Who, certain of his fate, loves not his wronger;
But O, what damned minutes tells he o’er
Who dotes, yet doubts, suspects, yet strongly loves!

Othello

O misery!

Iago

Poor and content is rich, and rich enough;
But riches fineless is as poor as winter
To him that ever fears he shall be poor.
Good heaven, the souls of all my tribe defend
From jealousy!

Othello

Why, why is this?
Think’st thou I’d make a life of jealousy,
To follow still the changes of the moon
With fresh suspicions? No. To be once in doubt
Is once to be resolv’d: exchange me for a goat
When I shall turn the business of my soul
To such exsufflicate and blown surmises,
Matching thy inference. ’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!

Iago

I am glad of it, for now I shall have reason
To show the love and duty that I bear you
With franker spirit: therefore, as I am bound,
Receive it from me. I speak not yet of proof.
Look to your wife; observe her well with Cassio;
Wear your eye thus, not jealous nor secure.
I would not have your free and noble nature,
Out of self-bounty, be abus’d. Look to’t.
I know our country disposition well;
In Venice they do let heaven see the pranks
They dare not show their husbands. Their best conscience
Is not to leave undone, but keep unknown.

Othello

Dost thou say so?

Iago

She did deceive her father, marrying you;
And when she seem’d to shake and fear your looks,
She loved them most.

Othello

And so she did.

Iago

Why, go to then.
She that so young could give out such a seeming,
To seal her father’s eyes up close as oak,
He thought ’twas witchcraft. But I am much to blame.
I humbly do beseech you of your pardon
For too much loving you.

Othello

I am bound to thee for ever.

Iago

I see this hath a little dash’d your spirits.

Othello

Not a jot, not a jot.

Iago

Trust me, I fear it has.
I hope you will consider what is spoke
Comes from my love. But I do see you’re mov’d.
I am to pray you not to strain my speech
To grosser issues nor to larger reach
Than to suspicion.

Othello

I will not.

Iago

Should you do so, my lord,
My speech should fall into such vile success
Which my thoughts aim’d not. Cassio’s my worthy friend.
My lord, I see you’re mov’d.

Othello

No, not much mov’d.
I do not think but Desdemona’s honest.

Iago

Long live she so! And long live you to think so!

Othello

And yet, how nature erring from itself—

Iago

Ay, there’s the point. As, to be bold with you,
Not to affect many proposed matches,
Of her own clime, complexion, and degree,
Whereto we see in all things nature tends;
Foh! One may smell in such a will most rank,
Foul disproportion, thoughts unnatural.
But pardon me: I do not in position
Distinctly speak of her, though I may fear
Her will, recoiling to her better judgement,
May fall to match you with her country forms,
And happily repent.

Othello

Farewell, farewell:
If more thou dost perceive, let me know more;
Set on thy wife to observe. Leave me, Iago.

Iago

[Going.]

My lord, I take my leave.

Othello

Why did I marry? This honest creature doubtless
Sees and knows more, much more, than he unfolds.

Iago

[Returning.]

My lord, I would I might entreat your honour
To scan this thing no further. Leave it to time:
Though it be fit that Cassio have his place,
For sure he fills it up with great ability,
Yet if you please to hold him off awhile,
You shall by that perceive him and his means.
Note if your lady strain his entertainment
With any strong or vehement importunity,
Much will be seen in that. In the meantime,
Let me be thought too busy in my fears
(As worthy cause I have to fear I am)
And hold her free, I do beseech your honour.

Othello

Fear not my government.

Iago

I once more take my leave.

[Exit.]

Othello

This fellow’s of exceeding honesty,
And knows all qualities, with a learned spirit,
Of human dealings. If I do prove her haggard,
Though that her jesses were my dear heartstrings,
I’d whistle her off, and let her down the wind
To prey at fortune. Haply, for I am black,
And have not those soft parts of conversation
That chamberers have, or for I am declin’d
Into the vale of years,—yet that’s not much—
She’s gone, I am abus’d, and my relief
Must be to loathe her. O curse of marriage,
That we can call these delicate creatures ours,
And not their appetites! I had rather be a toad,
And live upon the vapour of a dungeon,
Than keep a corner in the thing I love
For others’ uses. Yet, ’tis the plague of great ones,
Prerogativ’d are they less than the base,
’Tis destiny unshunnable, like death:
Even then this forked plague is fated to us
When we do quicken. Desdemona comes.
If she be false, O, then heaven mocks itself!
I’ll not believe’t.

Enter Desdemona and Emilia.

Desdemona

How now, my dear Othello?
Your dinner, and the generous islanders
By you invited, do attend your presence.

Othello

I am to blame.

Desdemona

Why do you speak so faintly?
Are you not well?

Othello

I have a pain upon my forehead here.

Desdemona

Faith, that’s with watching, ’twill away again;
Let me but bind it hard, within this hour
It will be well.

Othello

Your napkin° is too little; handkerchief

[He puts the handkerchief from him, and she drops it.]

Let it alone. Come, I’ll go in with you.

Desdemona

I am very sorry that you are not well.

[Exeunt° Othello and Desdemona.]

they leave

Emilia

I am glad I have found this napkin;° handkerchief
This was her first remembrance from the Moor.
My wayward husband hath a hundred times
Woo’d me to steal it. But she so loves the token,
For he conjur’d her she should ever keep it,
That she reserves it evermore about her
To kiss and talk to. I’ll have the work ta’en out,
And give’t Iago. What he will do with it
Heaven knows, not I,
I nothing but to please his fantasy.

Enter Iago.

Iago

How now? What do you here alone?

Emilia

Do not you chide. I have a thing for you.

Iago

A thing for me? It is a common thing—

Emilia

Ha?

Iago

To have a foolish wife.

Emilia

O, is that all? What will you give me now
For that same handkerchief?

Iago

What handkerchief?

Emilia

What handkerchief?
Why, that the Moor first gave to Desdemona,
That which so often you did bid me steal.

Iago

Hast stol’n it from her?

Emilia

No, faith, she let it drop by negligence,
And, to the advantage, I being here, took ’t up.
Look, here it is.

Iago

A good wench, give it me.

Emilia

What will you do with’t, that you have been so earnest
To have me filch it?

Iago

[Snatching it.]

Why, what’s that to you?

Emilia

If it be not for some purpose of import,
Give ’t me again. Poor lady, she’ll run mad
When she shall lack it.

Iago

Be not acknown on’t, I have use for it.
Go, leave me.

[Exit Emilia.]

I will in Cassio’s lodging lose this napkin,° handkerchief
And let him find it. Trifles light as air
Are to the jealous confirmations strong
As proofs of holy writ. This may do something.
The Moor already changes with my poison:
Dangerous conceits are in their natures poisons,
Which at the first are scarce found to distaste,
But with a little act upon the blood
Burn like the mines of sulphur. I did say so.

Enter Othello.

Look, where he comes. Not poppy, nor mandragora,
Nor all the drowsy syrups of the world,
Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep
Which thou ow’dst yesterday.

Othello

Ha! ha! false to me?

Iago

Why, how now, general? No more of that.

Othello

Avaunt! be gone! Thou hast set me on the rack.
I swear ’tis better to be much abus’d
Than but to know’t a little.

Iago

How now, my lord?

Othello

What sense had I of her stol’n hours of lust?
I saw’t not, thought it not, it harm’d not me.
I slept the next night well, was free and merry;
I found not Cassio’s kisses on her lips.
He that is robb’d, not wanting what is stol’n,
Let him not know’t, and he’s not robb’d at all.

Iago

I am sorry to hear this.

Othello

I had been happy if the general camp,
Pioners and all, had tasted her sweet body,
So I had nothing known. O, now, for ever
Farewell the tranquil mind! Farewell content!
Farewell the plumed troops and the big wars
That make ambition virtue! O, farewell,
Farewell the neighing steed and the shrill trump,
The spirit-stirring drum, the ear-piercing fife,
The royal banner, and all quality,
Pride, pomp, and circumstance of glorious war!
And, O you mortal engines, whose rude throats
The immortal Jove’s dread clamours counterfeit,
Farewell! Othello’s occupation’s gone!

Iago

Is’t possible, my lord?

Othello

Villain, be sure thou prove my love a whore;
Be sure of it. Give me the ocular proof,
Or, by the worth of man’s eternal soul,
Thou hadst been better have been born a dog
Than answer my wak’d wrath.

Iago

Is’t come to this?

Othello

Make me to see’t, or at the least so prove it,
That the probation bear no hinge nor loop
To hang a doubt on, or woe upon thy life!

Iago

My noble lord,—

Othello

If thou dost slander her and torture me,
Never pray more. Abandon all remorse;
On horror’s head horrors accumulate;
Do deeds to make heaven weep, all earth amaz’d;
For nothing canst thou to damnation add
Greater than that.

Iago

O grace! O heaven defend me!
Are you a man? Have you a soul or sense?
God be wi’ you. Take mine office.—O wretched fool,
That liv’st to make thine honesty a vice!
O monstrous world! Take note, take note, O world,
To be direct and honest is not safe.
I thank you for this profit, and from hence
I’ll love no friend, sith love breeds such offence.

Othello

Nay, stay. Thou shouldst be honest.

Iago

I should be wise; for honesty’s a fool,
And loses that it works for.

Othello

By the world,
I think my wife be honest, and think she is not.
I think that thou art just, and think thou art not.
I’ll have some proof: her name, that was as fresh
As Dian’s visage, is now begrim’d and black
As mine own face. If there be cords or knives,
Poison or fire, or suffocating streams,
I’ll not endure ’t. Would I were satisfied!

Iago

I see, sir, you are eaten up with passion.
I do repent me that I put it to you.
You would be satisfied?

Othello

Would? Nay, I will.

Iago

And may; but how? How satisfied, my lord?
Would you, the supervisor, grossly gape on,
Behold her topp’d?

Othello

Death and damnation! O!

Iago

It were a tedious difficulty, I think,
To bring them to that prospect. Damn them then,
If ever mortal eyes do see them bolster
More than their own! What then? How then?
What shall I say? Where’s satisfaction?
It is impossible you should see this,
Were they as prime as goats, as hot as monkeys,
As salt as wolves in pride, and fools as gross
As ignorance made drunk. But yet I say,
If imputation and strong circumstances,
Which lead directly to the door of truth,
Will give you satisfaction, you may have’t.

Othello

Give me a living reason she’s disloyal.

Iago

I do not like the office,
But sith I am enter’d in this cause so far,
Prick’d to ’t by foolish honesty and love,
I will go on. I lay with Cassio lately,
And being troubled with a raging tooth,
I could not sleep.
There are a kind of men so loose of soul,
That in their sleeps will mutter their affairs.
One of this kind is Cassio:
In sleep I heard him say, “Sweet Desdemona,
Let us be wary, let us hide our loves”;
And then, sir, would he gripe and wring my hand,
Cry “O sweet creature!” and then kiss me hard,
As if he pluck’d up kisses by the roots,
That grew upon my lips, then laid his leg
Over my thigh, and sigh’d and kiss’d, and then
Cried “Cursed fate that gave thee to the Moor!”

Othello

O monstrous! monstrous!

Iago

Nay, this was but his dream.

Othello

But this denoted a foregone conclusion.
’Tis a shrewd doubt, though it be but a dream.

Iago

And this may help to thicken other proofs
That do demonstrate thinly.

Othello

I’ll tear her all to pieces.

Iago

Nay, but be wise. Yet we see nothing done,
She may be honest yet. Tell me but this,
Have you not sometimes seen a handkerchief
Spotted with strawberries in your wife’s hand?

Othello

I gave her such a one, ’twas my first gift.

Iago

I know not that: but such a handkerchief
(I am sure it was your wife’s) did I today
See Cassio wipe his beard with.

Othello

If it be that,—

Iago

If it be that, or any that was hers,
It speaks against her with the other proofs.

Othello

O, that the slave had forty thousand lives!
One is too poor, too weak for my revenge!
Now do I see ’tis true. Look here, Iago;
All my fond love thus do I blow to heaven.
’Tis gone.
Arise, black vengeance, from thy hollow hell!
Yield up, O love, thy crown and hearted throne
To tyrannous hate! Swell, bosom, with thy fraught,
For ’tis of aspics’ tongues!

Iago

Yet be content.

Othello

O, blood, Iago, blood!

Iago

Patience, I say. Your mind perhaps may change.

Othello

Never, Iago. Like to the Pontic Sea,
Whose icy current and compulsive course
Ne’er feels retiring ebb, but keeps due on
To the Propontic and the Hellespont;
Even so my bloody thoughts, with violent pace
Shall ne’er look back, ne’er ebb to humble love,
Till that a capable and wide revenge
Swallow them up. Now by yond marble heaven,
In the due reverence of a sacred vow.

[Kneels.]

I here engage my words.

Iago

Do not rise yet.

[Kneels.]

Witness, you ever-burning lights above,
You elements that clip us round about,
Witness that here Iago doth give up
The execution of his wit, hands, heart,
To wrong’d Othello’s service! Let him command,
And to obey shall be in me remorse,
What bloody business ever.

[They rise.]

Othello

I greet thy love,
Not with vain thanks, but with acceptance bounteous,
And will upon the instant put thee to ’t.
Within these three days let me hear thee say
That Cassio’s not alive.

Iago

My friend is dead. ’Tis done at your request.
But let her live.

Othello

Damn her, lewd minx! O, damn her, damn her!
Come, go with me apart, I will withdraw
To furnish me with some swift means of death
For the fair devil. Now art thou my lieutenant.

Iago

I am your own for ever.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT III, SCENE IV.
Cyprus. Before the Castle.

Enter Desdemona, Emilia and Clown.

Desdemona

Do you know, sirrah, where Lieutenant Cassio lies?

Clown

I dare not say he lies anywhere.

Desdemona

Why, man?

Clown

He’s a soldier; and for one to say a soldier lies is stabbing.

Desdemona

Go to. Where lodges he?

Clown

To tell you where he lodges is to tell you where I lie.

Desdemona

Can anything be made of this?

Clown

I know not where he lodges; and for me to devise a lodging, and say he lies here, or he lies there, were to lie in mine own throat.

Desdemona

Can you inquire him out, and be edified by report?

Clown

I will catechize the world for him, that is, make questions and by them answer.

Desdemona

Seek him, bid him come hither. Tell him I have moved my lord on his behalf, and hope all will be well.

Clown

To do this is within the compass of man’s wit, and therefore I will attempt the doing it.

[Exit.]

Desdemona

Where should I lose that handkerchief, Emilia?

Emilia

I know not, madam.

Desdemona

Believe me, I had rather have lost my purse
Full of crusadoes. And but my noble Moor
Is true of mind and made of no such baseness
As jealous creatures are, it were enough
To put him to ill thinking.

Emilia

Is he not jealous?

Desdemona

Who, he? I think the sun where he was born
Drew all such humours from him.

Emilia

Look, where he comes.

Enter Othello.

Desdemona

I will not leave him now till Cassio
Be call’d to him. How is’t with you, my lord?

Othello

Well, my good lady.

[Aside.]

O, hardness to dissemble!
How do you, Desdemona?

Desdemona

Well, my good lord.

Othello

Give me your hand. This hand is moist, my lady.

Desdemona

It yet hath felt no age nor known no sorrow.

Othello

This argues fruitfulness and liberal heart.
Hot, hot, and moist. This hand of yours requires
A sequester from liberty, fasting and prayer,
Much castigation, exercise devout;
For here’s a young and sweating devil here
That commonly rebels. ’Tis a good hand,
A frank one.

Desdemona

You may indeed say so,
For ’twas that hand that gave away my heart.

Othello

A liberal hand. The hearts of old gave hands,
But our new heraldry is hands, not hearts.

Desdemona

I cannot speak of this. Come now, your promise.

Othello

What promise, chuck?

Desdemona

I have sent to bid Cassio come speak with you.

Othello

I have a salt and sorry rheum offends me.
Lend me thy handkerchief.

Desdemona

Here, my lord.

Othello

That which I gave you.

Desdemona

I have it not about me.

Othello

Not?

Desdemona

No, faith, my lord.

Othello

That is a fault. That handkerchief
Did an Egyptian to my mother give.
She was a charmer, and could almost read
The thoughts of people. She told her, while she kept it,
’Twould make her amiable and subdue my father
Entirely to her love. But if she lost it,
Or made a gift of it, my father’s eye
Should hold her loathed, and his spirits should hunt
After new fancies: she, dying, gave it me,
And bid me, when my fate would have me wive,
To give it her. I did so; and take heed on’t,
Make it a darling like your precious eye.
To lose’t or give’t away were such perdition° a loss
As nothing else could match.

Desdemona

Is’t possible?

Othello

’Tis true. There’s magic in the web of it.
A sibyl, that had number’d in the world
The sun to course two hundred compasses,
In her prophetic fury sew’d the work;
The worms were hallow’d that did breed the silk,
And it was dyed in mummy, which the skillful
Conserv’d of maiden’s hearts.

Desdemona

Indeed? Is’t true?

Othello

Most veritable, therefore look to ’t well.

Desdemona

Then would to God that I had never seen ’t!

Othello

Ha? wherefore?

Desdemona

Why do you speak so startingly and rash?

Othello

Is’t lost? is’t gone? speak, is it out of the way?

Desdemona

Heaven bless us!

Othello

Say you?

Desdemona

It is not lost, but what and if it were?

Othello

How?

Desdemona

I say it is not lost.

Othello

Fetch’t, let me see ’t.

Desdemona

Why, so I can, sir, but I will not now.
This is a trick to put me from my suit.
Pray you, let Cassio be receiv’d again.

Othello

Fetch me the handkerchief! My mind misgives.

Desdemona

Come, come.
You’ll never meet a more sufficient man.

Othello

The handkerchief!

Desdemona

I pray, talk me of Cassio.

Othello

The handkerchief!

Desdemona

A man that all his time
Hath founded his good fortunes on your love,
Shar’d dangers with you,—

Othello

The handkerchief!

Desdemona

In sooth, you are to blame.

Othello

Away!

[Exit.]

Emilia

Is not this man jealous?

Desdemona

I ne’er saw this before.
Sure there’s some wonder in this handkerchief,
I am most unhappy in the loss of it.

Emilia

’Tis not a year or two shows us a man:
They are all but stomachs and we all but food;
They eat us hungerly, and when they are full,
They belch us.

Enter Cassio and Iago.

Look you, Cassio and my husband.

Iago

There is no other way; ’tis she must do ’t,
And, lo, the happiness! Go and importune her.

Desdemona

How now, good Cassio, what’s the news with you?

Cassio

Madam, my former suit: I do beseech you
That by your virtuous means I may again
Exist, and be a member of his love,
Whom I, with all the office of my heart,
Entirely honour. I would not be delay’d.
If my offence be of such mortal kind
That nor my service past, nor present sorrows,
Nor purpos’d merit in futurity,
Can ransom me into his love again,
But to know so must be my benefit;
So shall I clothe me in a forc’d content,
And shut myself up in some other course
To fortune’s alms.

Desdemona

Alas, thrice-gentle Cassio,
My advocation is not now in tune;
My lord is not my lord; nor should I know him
Were he in favour as in humour° alter’d. mood
So help me every spirit sanctified,
As I have spoken for you all my best,
And stood within the blank of his displeasure
For my free speech! You must awhile be patient.
What I can do I will; and more I will
Than for myself I dare. Let that suffice you.

Iago

Is my lord angry?

Emilia

He went hence but now,
And certainly in strange unquietness.

Iago

Can he be angry? I have seen the cannon,
When it hath blown his ranks into the air
And, like the devil, from his very arm
Puff’d his own brother, and can he be angry?
Something of moment then. I will go meet him.
There’s matter in’t indeed if he be angry.

Desdemona

I prithee do so.

[Exit Iago.]

Something sure of state,
Either from Venice, or some unhatch’d practice
Made demonstrable here in Cyprus to him,
Hath puddled his clear spirit, and in such cases
Men’s natures wrangle with inferior things,
Though great ones are their object. ’Tis even so.
For let our finger ache, and it indues
Our other healthful members even to that sense
Of pain. Nay, we must think men are not gods,
Nor of them look for such observancy
As fits the bridal. Beshrew me much, Emilia,
I was (unhandsome warrior as I am)
Arraigning his unkindness with my soul;
But now I find I had suborn’d the witness,
And he’s indicted falsely.

Emilia

Pray heaven it be state matters, as you think,
And no conception nor no jealous toy
Concerning you.

Desdemona

Alas the day, I never gave him cause!

Emilia

But jealous souls will not be answer’d so;
They are not ever jealous for the cause,
But jealous for they are jealous: ’tis a monster
Begot upon itself, born on itself.

Desdemona

Heaven keep that monster from Othello’s mind!

Emilia

Lady, amen.

Desdemona

I will go seek him. Cassio, walk hereabout:
If I do find him fit, I’ll move your suit,
And seek to effect it to my uttermost.

Cassio

I humbly thank your ladyship.

[Exeunt° Desdemona and Emilia.]

they leave

Enter Bianca.

Bianca

Save you, friend Cassio!

Cassio

What make you from home?
How is it with you, my most fair Bianca?
I’ faith, sweet love, I was coming to your house.

Bianca

And I was going to your lodging, Cassio.
What, keep a week away? Seven days and nights?
Eight score eight hours, and lovers’ absent hours,
More tedious than the dial eight score times?
O weary reckoning!

Cassio

Pardon me, Bianca.
I have this while with leaden thoughts been press’d,
But I shall in a more continuate time
Strike off this score of absence. Sweet Bianca, [Giving her Desdemona’s handkerchief.]

Take me this work out.

Bianca

O Cassio, whence came this?
This is some token from a newer friend.
To the felt absence now I feel a cause.
Is’t come to this? Well, well.

Cassio

Go to, woman!
Throw your vile guesses in the devil’s teeth,
From whence you have them. You are jealous now
That this is from some mistress, some remembrance.
No, in good troth, Bianca.

Bianca

Why, whose is it?

Cassio

I know not neither. I found it in my chamber.
I like the work well. Ere it be demanded,
As like enough it will, I’d have it copied.
Take it, and do ’t, and leave me for this time.

Bianca

Leave you, wherefore?

Cassio

I do attend here on the general,
And think it no addition, nor my wish,
To have him see me woman’d.

Bianca

Why, I pray you?

Cassio

Not that I love you not.

Bianca

But that you do not love me.
I pray you bring me on the way a little,
And say if I shall see you soon at night.

Cassio

’Tis but a little way that I can bring you,
For I attend here. But I’ll see you soon.

Bianca

’Tis very good; I must be circumstanc’d.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT IV

SCENE I.
Cyprus. Before the Castle.

Enter Othello and Iago.

Iago

Will you think so?

Othello

Think so, Iago?

Iago

What,
To kiss in private?

Othello

An unauthoriz’d kiss.

Iago

Or to be naked with her friend in bed
An hour or more, not meaning any harm?

Othello

Naked in bed, Iago, and not mean harm?
It is hypocrisy against the devil:
They that mean virtuously and yet do so,
The devil their virtue tempts, and they tempt heaven.

Iago

So they do nothing, ’tis a venial slip.
But if I give my wife a handkerchief—

Othello

What then?

Iago

Why then, ’tis hers, my lord, and being hers,
She may, I think, bestow’t on any man.

Othello

She is protectress of her honour too.
May she give that?

Iago

Her honour is an essence that’s not seen;
They have it very oft that have it not:
But for the handkerchief—

Othello

By heaven, I would most gladly have forgot it.
Thou said’st (O, it comes o’er my memory,
As doth the raven o’er the infected house,
Boding to all) he had my handkerchief.

Iago

Ay, what of that?

Othello

That’s not so good now.

Iago

What
If I had said I had seen him do you wrong?
Or heard him say (as knaves be such abroad,
Who having, by their own importunate suit,
Or voluntary dotage of some mistress,
Convinced or supplied them, cannot choose
But they must blab.)

Othello

Hath he said anything?

Iago

He hath, my lord, but be you well assur’d,
No more than he’ll unswear.

Othello

What hath he said?

Iago

Faith, that he did—I know not what he did.

Othello

What? What?

Iago

Lie.

Othello

With her?

Iago

With her, on her, what you will.

Othello

Lie with her! lie on her!—We say lie on her when they belie her.—Lie with her! that’s fulsome. Handkerchief—confessions—handkerchief! To confess, and be hanged for his labour. First, to be hanged, and then to confess. I tremble at it. Nature would not invest herself in such shadowing passion without some instruction. It is not words that shake me thus. Pish! Noses, ears, and lips. Is’t possible?—Confess?—handkerchief?—O devil!— [Falls in a trance.]

Iago

Work on,
My medicine, work! Thus credulous fools are caught,
And many worthy and chaste dames even thus,
All guiltless, meet reproach. What, ho! my lord!
My lord, I say! Othello! Enter Cassio.
How now, Cassio!

Cassio

What’s the matter?

Iago

My lord is fallen into an epilepsy.
This is his second fit. He had one yesterday.

Cassio

Rub him about the temples.

Iago

No, forbear;
The lethargy must have his quiet course.
If not, he foams at mouth, and by and by
Breaks out to savage madness. Look, he stirs:
Do you withdraw yourself a little while,
He will recover straight. When he is gone,
I would on great occasion speak with you.

[Exit Cassio.]

How is it, general? Have you not hurt your head?

Othello

Dost thou mock me?

Iago

I mock you? No, by heaven.
Would you would bear your fortune like a man!

Othello

A horned man’s a monster and a beast.

Iago

There’s many a beast, then, in a populous city,
And many a civil monster.

Othello

Did he confess it?

Iago

Good sir, be a man.
Think every bearded fellow that’s but yok’d
May draw with you. There’s millions now alive
That nightly lie in those unproper beds
Which they dare swear peculiar: your case is better.
O, ’tis the spite of hell, the fiend’s arch-mock,
To lip a wanton in a secure couch,
And to suppose her chaste! No, let me know,
And knowing what I am, I know what she shall be.

Othello

O, thou art wise, ’tis certain.

Iago

Stand you awhile apart,
Confine yourself but in a patient list.
Whilst you were here o’erwhelmed with your grief,
(A passion most unsuiting such a man)
Cassio came hither. I shifted him away,
And laid good ’scuse upon your ecstasy,
Bade him anon return, and here speak with me,
The which he promis’d. Do but encave yourself,
And mark the fleers, the gibes, and notable scorns,
That dwell in every region of his face;
For I will make him tell the tale anew,
Where, how, how oft, how long ago, and when
He hath, and is again to cope your wife:
I say, but mark his gesture. Marry, patience,
Or I shall say you are all in all in spleen,
And nothing of a man.

Othello

Dost thou hear, Iago?
I will be found most cunning in my patience;
But,—dost thou hear?—most bloody.

Iago

That’s not amiss.
But yet keep time in all. Will you withdraw?

[Othello withdraws.]

Now will I question Cassio of Bianca,
A housewife that by selling her desires
Buys herself bread and clothes: it is a creature
That dotes on Cassio, (as ’tis the strumpet’s plague
To beguile many and be beguil’d by one.)
He, when he hears of her, cannot refrain
From the excess of laughter. Here he comes.

Enter Cassio.

As he shall smile Othello shall go mad,
And his unbookish jealousy must construe
Poor Cassio’s smiles, gestures, and light behaviour
Quite in the wrong. How do you now, lieutenant?

Cassio

The worser that you give me the addition
Whose want even kills me.

Iago

Ply Desdemona well, and you are sure on’t.

[Speaking lower.]

Now, if this suit lay in Bianca’s power,
How quickly should you speed!

Cassio

Alas, poor caitiff!

Othello

[Aside.]

Look how he laughs already!

Iago

I never knew a woman love man so.

Cassio

Alas, poor rogue! I think, i’ faith, she loves me.

Othello

[Aside.]

Now he denies it faintly and laughs it out.

Iago

Do you hear, Cassio?

Othello

Now he importunes him
To tell it o’er. Go to, well said, well said.

Iago

She gives it out that you shall marry her.
Do you intend it?

Cassio

Ha, ha, ha!

Othello

Do you triumph, Roman? Do you triumph?

Cassio

I marry her? What? A customer? I prithee, bear some charity to my wit, do not think it so unwholesome. Ha, ha, ha!

Othello

So, so, so, so. They laugh that wins.

Iago

Faith, the cry goes that you shall marry her.

Cassio

Prithee say true.

Iago

I am a very villain else.

Othello

Have you scored me? Well.

Cassio

This is the monkey’s own giving out. She is persuaded I will marry her, out of her own love and flattery, not out of my promise.

Othello

Iago beckons me. Now he begins the story.

Cassio

She was here even now. She haunts me in every place. I was the other day talking on the sea-bank with certain Venetians, and thither comes the bauble, and falls thus about my neck.

Othello

Crying, “O dear Cassio!” as it were: his gesture imports it.

Cassio

So hangs, and lolls, and weeps upon me; so hales and pulls me. Ha, ha, ha!

Othello

Now he tells how she plucked him to my chamber. O, I see that nose of yours, but not that dog I shall throw it to.

Cassio

Well, I must leave her company.

Iago

Before me! look where she comes.

Enter Bianca.

Cassio

’Tis such another fitchew! Marry, a perfum’d one.
What do you mean by this haunting of me?

Bianca

Let the devil and his dam haunt you! What did you mean by that same handkerchief you gave me even now? I was a fine fool to take it. I must take out the work? A likely piece of work, that you should find it in your chamber and not know who left it there! This is some minx’s token, and I must take out the work? There, give it your hobby-horse. Wheresoever you had it, I’ll take out no work on’t.

Cassio

How now, my sweet Bianca? How now, how now?

Othello

By heaven, that should be my handkerchief!

Bianca

If you’ll come to supper tonight, you may. If you will not, come when you are next prepared for.

[Exit.]

Iago

After her, after her.

Cassio

Faith, I must; she’ll rail in the street else.

Iago

Will you sup there?

Cassio

Faith, I intend so.

Iago

Well, I may chance to see you, for I would very fain speak with you.

Cassio

Prithee come, will you?

Iago

Go to; say no more.

[Exit Cassio.]

Othello

[Coming forward.]

How shall I murder him, Iago?

Iago

Did you perceive how he laughed at his vice?

Othello

O Iago!

Iago

And did you see the handkerchief?

Othello

Was that mine?

Iago

Yours, by this hand: and to see how he prizes the foolish woman your wife! she gave it him, and he hath given it his whore.

Othello

I would have him nine years a-killing. A fine woman, a fair woman, a sweet woman!

Iago

Nay, you must forget that.

Othello

Ay, let her rot, and perish, and be damned tonight, for she shall not live. No, my heart is turned to stone; I strike it, and it hurts my hand. O, the world hath not a sweeter creature. She might lie by an emperor’s side, and command him tasks.

Iago

Nay, that’s not your way.

Othello

Hang her, I do but say what she is. So delicate with her needle, an admirable musician! O, she will sing the savageness out of a bear! Of so high and plenteous wit and invention!

Iago

She’s the worse for all this.

Othello

O, a thousand, a thousand times: and then of so gentle a condition!

Iago

Ay, too gentle.

Othello

Nay, that’s certain. But yet the pity of it, Iago! O Iago, the pity of it, Iago!

Iago

If you are so fond over her iniquity, give her patent to offend, for if it touch not you, it comes near nobody.

Othello

I will chop her into messes. Cuckold me!

Iago

O, ’tis foul in her.

Othello

With mine officer!

Iago

That’s fouler.

Othello

Get me some poison, Iago; this night. I’ll not expostulate with her, lest her body and beauty unprovide my mind again. This night, Iago.

Iago

Do it not with poison, strangle her in her bed, even the bed she hath contaminated.

Othello

Good, good. The justice of it pleases. Very good.

Iago

And for Cassio, let me be his undertaker. You shall hear more by midnight.

Othello

Excellent good.

[A trumpet within.]

What trumpet is that same?

Enter Lodovico, Desdemona and Attendant.

Iago

Something from Venice, sure. ’Tis Lodovico
Come from the duke. See, your wife is with him.

Lodovico

Save you, worthy general!

Othello

With all my heart, sir.

Lodovico

The duke and senators of Venice greet you.

[Gives him a packet.]

Othello

I kiss the instrument of their pleasures.

[Opens the packet and reads.]

Desdemona

And what’s the news, good cousin Lodovico?

Iago

I am very glad to see you, signior.
Welcome to Cyprus.

Lodovico

I thank you. How does Lieutenant Cassio?

Iago

Lives, sir.

Desdemona

Cousin, there’s fall’n between him and my lord
An unkind breach, but you shall make all well.

Othello

Are you sure of that?

Desdemona

My lord?

Othello

[Reads.]

“This fail you not to do, as you will—”

Lodovico

He did not call; he’s busy in the paper.
Is there division ’twixt my lord and Cassio?

Desdemona

A most unhappy one. I would do much
To atone them, for the love I bear to Cassio.

Othello

Fire and brimstone!

Desdemona

My lord?

Othello

Are you wise?

Desdemona

What, is he angry?

Lodovico

May be the letter mov’d him;
For, as I think, they do command him home,
Deputing Cassio in his government.

Desdemona

Trust me, I am glad on’t.

Othello

Indeed!

Desdemona

My lord?

Othello

I am glad to see you mad.

Desdemona

Why, sweet Othello?

Othello

Devil! [Striking her.]

Desdemona

I have not deserv’d this.

Lodovico

My lord, this would not be believ’d in Venice,
Though I should swear I saw’t: ’tis very much.
Make her amends. She weeps.

Othello

O devil, devil!
If that the earth could teem with woman’s tears,
Each drop she falls would prove a crocodile.
Out of my sight!

Desdemona

I will not stay to offend you.

[Going.]

Lodovico

Truly, an obedient lady.
I do beseech your lordship, call her back.

Othello

Mistress!

Desdemona

My lord?

Othello

What would you with her, sir?

Lodovico

Who, I, my lord?

Othello

Ay, you did wish that I would make her turn.
Sir, she can turn, and turn, and yet go on,
And turn again. And she can weep, sir, weep;
And she’s obedient, as you say, obedient,
Very obedient. Proceed you in your tears.
Concerning this, sir,—O well-painted passion!
I am commanded home.—Get you away;
I’ll send for you anon.—Sir, I obey the mandate,
And will return to Venice.—Hence, avaunt! [Exit Desdemona.]

Cassio shall have my place. And, sir, tonight,
I do entreat that we may sup together.
You are welcome, sir, to Cyprus. Goats and monkeys!

[Exit.]

Lodovico

Is this the noble Moor, whom our full senate
Call all in all sufficient? Is this the nature
Whom passion could not shake? whose solid virtue
The shot of accident nor dart of chance
Could neither graze nor pierce?

Iago

He is much chang’d.

Lodovico

Are his wits safe? Is he not light of brain?

Iago

He’s that he is. I may not breathe my censure
What he might be. If what he might he is not,
I would to heaven he were!

Lodovico

What, strike his wife?

Iago

Faith, that was not so well; yet would I knew
That stroke would prove the worst!

Lodovico

Is it his use?
Or did the letters work upon his blood,
And new-create this fault?

Iago

Alas, alas!
It is not honesty in me to speak
What I have seen and known. You shall observe him,
And his own courses will denote him so
That I may save my speech: do but go after,
And mark how he continues.

Lodovico

I am sorry that I am deceiv’d in him.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT IV, SCENE II.
Cyprus. A Room in the Castle.

Enter Othello and Emilia.

Othello

You have seen nothing, then?

Emilia

Nor ever heard, nor ever did suspect.

Othello

Yes, you have seen Cassio and she together.

Emilia

But then I saw no harm, and then I heard
Each syllable that breath made up between them.

Othello

What, did they never whisper?

Emilia

Never, my lord.

Othello

Nor send you out o’ the way?

Emilia

Never.

Othello

To fetch her fan, her gloves, her mask, nor nothing?

Emilia

Never, my lord.

Othello

That’s strange.

Emilia

I durst, my lord, to wager she is honest,
Lay down my soul at stake: if you think other,
Remove your thought, it doth abuse your bosom.
If any wretch have put this in your head,
Let heaven requite it with the serpent’s curse,
For if she be not honest, chaste, and true,
There’s no man happy. The purest of their wives
Is foul as slander.

Othello

Bid her come hither. Go.

[Exit Emilia.]

She says enough. Yet she’s a simple bawd
That cannot say as much. This is a subtle whore,
A closet lock and key of villainous secrets.
And yet she’ll kneel and pray. I have seen her do ’t.

Enter Desdemona and Emilia.

Desdemona

My lord, what is your will?

Othello

Pray, chuck, come hither.

Desdemona

What is your pleasure?

Othello

Let me see your eyes.
Look in my face.

Desdemona

What horrible fancy’s this?

Othello

[To Emilia.]

Some of your function, mistress,
Leave procreants alone, and shut the door.
Cough, or cry hem, if anybody come.
Your mystery, your mystery. Nay, dispatch.

[Exit Emilia.]

Desdemona

Upon my knees, what doth your speech import?
I understand a fury in your words,
But not the words.

Othello

Why, what art thou?

Desdemona

Your wife, my lord, your true and loyal wife.

Othello

Come, swear it, damn thyself,
Lest, being like one of heaven, the devils themselves
Should fear to seize thee. Therefore be double-damn’d.
Swear thou art honest.

Desdemona

Heaven doth truly know it.

Othello

Heaven truly knows that thou art false as hell.

Desdemona

To whom, my lord? With whom? How am I false?

Othello

O Desdemona, away! away! away!

Desdemona

Alas the heavy day, why do you weep?
Am I the motive of these tears, my lord?
If haply° you my father do suspect by chance
An instrument of this your calling back,
Lay not your blame on me. If you have lost him,
Why, I have lost him too.

Othello

Had it pleas’d heaven
To try° me with affliction, had they rain’d test
All kinds of sores and shames on my bare head,
Steep’d me in poverty to the very lips,
Given to captivity me and my utmost hopes,
I should have found in some place of my soul
A drop of patience. But, alas, to make me
A fixed figure for the time of scorn
To point his slow unmoving finger at.
Yet could I bear that too, well, very well:
But there, where I have garner’d up my heart,
Where either I must live or bear no life,
The fountain from the which my current runs,
Or else dries up, to be discarded thence,
Or keep it as a cistern for foul toads
To knot and gender in!—turn thy complexion there,
Patience, thou young and rose-lipp’d cherubin,° angel
Ay, there, look grim as hell!

Desdemona

I hope my noble lord esteems me honest.

Othello

O, ay, as summer flies are in the shambles,° slaughterhouses
That quicken° even with blowing. O thou weed, come alive
Who art so lovely fair, and smell’st so sweet,
That the sense aches at thee,
Would thou hadst ne’er been born!

Desdemona

Alas, what ignorant sin have I committed?

Othello

Was this fair paper, this most goodly book,
Made to write “whore” upon? What committed?
Committed! O thou public commoner!
I should make very forges of my cheeks,
That would to cinders burn up modesty,
Did I but speak thy deeds. What committed!
Heaven stops the nose at it, and the moon winks;
The bawdy wind, that kisses all it meets,
Is hush’d within the hollow mine of earth,
And will not hear it. What committed!
Impudent strumpet!° whore

Desdemona

By heaven, you do me wrong.

Othello

Are not you a strumpet?

Desdemona

No, as I am a Christian:
If to preserve this vessel for my lord
From any other foul unlawful touch
Be not to be a strumpet, I am none.

Othello

What, not a whore?

Desdemona

No, as I shall be sav’d.

Othello

Is’t possible?

Desdemona

O, heaven forgive us!

Othello

I cry you mercy° then. beg your pardon
I took you for that cunning whore of Venice
That married with Othello.—You, mistress,

Enter Emilia.

That have the office opposite to Saint Peter,
And keeps the gate of hell. You, you, ay, you!
We have done our course; there’s money for your pains.
I pray you turn the key, and keep our counsel.

[Exit.]

Emilia

Alas, what does this gentleman conceive?° think
How do you, madam? How do you, my good lady?

Desdemona

Faith, half asleep.

Emilia

Good madam, what’s the matter with my lord?

Desdemona

With who?

Emilia

Why, with my lord, madam.

Desdemona

Who is thy lord?

Emilia

He that is yours, sweet lady.

Desdemona

I have none. Do not talk to me, Emilia,
I cannot weep, nor answer have I none
But what should go by water. Prithee, tonight
Lay on my bed my wedding sheets, remember,
And call thy husband hither.

Emilia

Here’s a change indeed!

[Exit.]

Desdemona

’Tis meet° I should be us’d° so, very meet. appropriate — treated
How have I been behav’d, that he might stick
The small’st opinion on my least misuse?

Enter Iago and Emilia.

Iago

What is your pleasure, madam? How is’t with you?

Desdemona

I cannot tell. Those that do teach young babes
Do it with gentle means and easy tasks.
He might have chid° me so, for, in good faith, criticized
I am a child to chiding.

Iago

What’s the matter, lady?

Emilia

Alas, Iago, my lord hath so bewhor’d her,
Thrown such despite and heavy terms upon her,
As true hearts cannot bear.

Desdemona

Am I that name, Iago?

Iago

What name, fair lady?

Desdemona

Such as she says my lord did say I was.

Emilia

He call’d her whore: a beggar in his drink
Could not have laid such terms upon his callet.° prostitute

Iago

Why did he so?

Desdemona

I do not know. I am sure I am none such.

Iago

Do not weep, do not weep: alas the day!

Emilia

Hath she forsook° so many noble matches, passed over
Her father, and her country, and her friends,
To be call’d whore? would it not make one weep?

Desdemona

It is my wretched fortune.

Iago

Beshrew° him for’t! curse
How comes this trick upon him?

Desdemona

Nay, heaven doth know.

Emilia

I will be hang’d, if some eternal villain,
Some busy and insinuating rogue,
Some cogging,° cozening° slave, to get some office,° cheating — deceiving — position
Have not devis’d this slander. I’ll be hang’d else.° otherwise

Iago

Fie, there is no such man. It is impossible.

Desdemona

If any such there be, heaven pardon him!

Emilia

A halter° pardon him, and hell gnaw his bones! noose
Why should he call her whore? who keeps her company?
What place? what time? what form? what likelihood?
The Moor’s abused by some most villainous knave,
Some base notorious knave, some scurvy fellow.
O heaven, that such companions thou’dst unfold,
And put in every honest hand a whip
To lash the rascals naked through the world
Even from the east to the west!

Iago

Speak within door.

Emilia

O, fie upon them! Some such squire he was
That turn’d your wit the seamy side without,
And made you to suspect me with the Moor.

Iago

You are a fool. Go to.

Desdemona

Alas, Iago,
What shall I do to win my lord again?
Good friend, go to him. For by this light of heaven,
I know not how I lost him. Here I kneel.
If e’er my will did trespass ’gainst his love,
Either in discourse of thought or actual deed,
Or that mine eyes, mine ears, or any sense,
Delighted them in any other form,
Or that I do not yet, and ever did,
And ever will, (though he do shake me off
To beggarly divorcement) love him dearly,
Comfort forswear me! Unkindness may do much;
And his unkindness may defeat my life,
But never taint my love. I cannot say “whore,”
It does abhor me now I speak the word;
To do the act that might the addition° earn title
Not the world’s mass of vanity could make me.

Iago

I pray you, be content. ’Tis but his humour.° mood
The business of the state does him offence,
And he does chide° with you. criticize

Desdemona

If ’twere no other,—

Iago

’Tis but so, I warrant.° promise

[Trumpets within.]

Hark, how these instruments summon to supper.
The messengers of Venice stay the meat.
Go in, and weep not. All things shall be well.

[Exeunt° Desdemona and Emilia.]

they leave

Enter Roderigo.

How now, Roderigo?

Roderigo

I do not find that thou dealest justly with me.

Iago

What in the contrary?

Roderigo

Every day thou daffest me with some device, Iago, and rather, as it seems to me now, keepest from me all conveniency than suppliest me with the least advantage of hope. I will indeed no longer endure it. Nor am I yet persuaded to put up in peace what already I have foolishly suffered.

Iago

Will you hear me, Roderigo?

Roderigo

Faith, I have heard too much, for your words and performances are no kin together.

Iago

You charge me most unjustly.

Roderigo

With naught but truth. I have wasted myself out of my means. The jewels you have had from me to deliver to Desdemona would half have corrupted a votarist:° you have told me she hath received them, and returned me expectations and comforts of sudden respect and acquaintance, but I find none. votarist = num

Iago

Well, go to, very well.

Roderigo

Very well, go to, I cannot go to, man, nor ’tis not very well. Nay, I say ’tis very scurvy, and begin to find myself fopped in it.

Iago

Very well.

Roderigo

I tell you ’tis not very well. I will make myself known to Desdemona. If she will return me my jewels, I will give over my suit and repent my unlawful solicitation. If not, assure yourself I will seek satisfaction of you.

Iago

You have said now.

Roderigo

Ay, and said nothing but what I protest intendment of doing.

Iago

Why, now I see there’s mettle° in thee, and even from this instant do build on thee a better opinion than ever before. Give me thy hand, Roderigo. Thou hast taken against me a most just exception, but yet I protest, I have dealt most directly in thy affair. mettle = spirit

Roderigo

It hath not appeared.

Iago

I grant indeed it hath not appeared, and your suspicion is not without wit and judgement. But, Roderigo, if thou hast that in thee indeed, which I have greater reason to believe now than ever,—I mean purpose, courage, and valour,—this night show it. If thou the next night following enjoy not Desdemona, take me from this world with treachery and devise engines for my life.

Roderigo

Well, what is it? Is it within reason and compass?

Iago

Sir, there is especial commission come from Venice to depute Cassio in Othello’s place.

Roderigo

Is that true? Why then Othello and Desdemona return again to Venice.

Iago

O, no; he goes into Mauritania, and takes away with him the fair Desdemona, unless his abode be lingered here by some accident: wherein none can be so determinate as the removing of Cassio.

Roderigo

How do you mean “removing” of him?

Iago

Why, by making him uncapable of Othello’s place: knocking out his brains.

Roderigo

And that you would have me to do?

Iago

Ay, if you dare do yourself a profit and a right. He sups tonight with a harlotry, and thither will I go to him. He knows not yet of his honourable fortune. If you will watch his going thence, which I will fashion to fall out between twelve and one, you may take him at your pleasure: I will be near to second your attempt, and he shall fall between us. Come, stand not amazed at it, but go along with me. I will show you such a necessity in his death that you shall think yourself bound to put it on him. It is now high supper-time, and the night grows to waste. About it.

Roderigo

I will hear further reason for this.

Iago

And you shall be satisfied.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT IV, SCENE III.
Cyprus. Another Room in the Castle.

Enter Othello, Lodovico, Desdemona, Emilia and Attendants.

Lodovico

I do beseech you, sir, trouble yourself no further.

Othello

O, pardon me; ’twill do me good to walk.

Lodovico

Madam, good night. I humbly thank your ladyship.

Desdemona

Your honour is most welcome.

Othello

Will you walk, sir?—
O, Desdemona,— DESDEMONA.
My lord?

Othello

Get you to bed on th’ instant, I will be return’d forthwith. Dismiss your attendant there. Look ’t be done.

Desdemona

I will, my lord.

[Exeunt° Othello, Lodovico and Attendants.]

they leave

Emilia

How goes it now? He looks gentler than he did.

Desdemona

He says he will return incontinent,
He hath commanded me to go to bed,
And bade me to dismiss you.

Emilia

Dismiss me?

Desdemona

It was his bidding. Therefore, good Emilia,
Give me my nightly wearing, and adieu.
We must not now displease him.

Emilia

I would you had never seen him!

Desdemona

So would not I. My love doth so approve him,
That even his stubbornness, his checks, his frowns,—
Prithee, unpin me,—have grace and favour in them.

Emilia

I have laid those sheets you bade me on the bed.

Desdemona

All’s one. Good faith, how foolish are our minds!
If I do die before thee, prithee, shroud me
In one of those same sheets.

Emilia

Come, come, you talk.

Desdemona

My mother had a maid call’d Barbary,
She was in love, and he she lov’d prov’d mad
And did forsake her. She had a song of “willow”,
An old thing ’twas, but it express’d her fortune,
And she died singing it. That song tonight
Will not go from my mind. I have much to do
But to go hang my head all at one side
And sing it like poor Barbary. Prithee dispatch.

Emilia

Shall I go fetch your night-gown?

Desdemona

No, unpin me here.
This Lodovico is a proper man.

Emilia

A very handsome man.

Desdemona

He speaks well.

Emilia

I know a lady in Venice would have walked barefoot to Palestine for a touch of his nether lip.

Desdemona

[Singing.]

    The poor soul sat sighing by a sycamore tree,
     Sing all a green willow.
    Her hand on her bosom, her head on her knee,
     Sing willow, willow, willow.
    The fresh streams ran by her, and murmur’d her moans,
     Sing willow, willow, willow;
    Her salt tears fell from her, and soften’d the stones;— Lay by these:— [Sings.]

     Sing willow, willow, willow.
Prithee hie thee. He’ll come anon.

[Sings.]

    Sing all a green willow must be my garland.
Let nobody blame him, his scorn I approve,— Nay, that’s not next. Hark! who is’t that knocks?

Emilia

It’s the wind.

Desdemona

[Sings.]

    I call’d my love false love; but what said he then?
     Sing willow, willow, willow:
    If I court mo women, you’ll couch with mo men.
So get thee gone; good night. Mine eyes do itch;
Doth that bode weeping?

Emilia

’Tis neither here nor there.

Desdemona

I have heard it said so. O, these men, these men!
Dost thou in conscience think,—tell me, Emilia,—
That there be women do abuse their husbands
In such gross kind?

Emilia

There be some such, no question.

Desdemona

Wouldst thou do such a deed for all the world?

Emilia

Why, would not you?

Desdemona

No, by this heavenly light!

Emilia

Nor I neither by this heavenly light,
I might do’t as well i’ the dark.

Desdemona

Wouldst thou do such a deed for all the world?

Emilia

The world’s a huge thing. It is a great price
For a small vice.

Desdemona

In troth, I think thou wouldst not.

Emilia

In troth, I think I should, and undo’t when I had done. Marry, I would not do such a thing for a joint-ring, nor for measures of lawn, nor for gowns, petticoats, nor caps, nor any petty exhibition; but, for the whole world—why, who would not make her husband a cuckold to make him a monarch? I should venture purgatory for ’t.

Desdemona

Beshrew me, if I would do such a wrong for the whole world.

Emilia

Why, the wrong is but a wrong i’ the world; and having the world for your labour, ’tis a wrong in your own world, and you might quickly make it right.

Desdemona

I do not think there is any such woman.

Emilia

Yes, a dozen; and as many to the vantage as would store the world they played for.
But I do think it is their husbands’ faults
If wives do fall: say that they slack their duties,
And pour our treasures into foreign laps;
Or else break out in peevish jealousies,
Throwing restraint upon us. Or say they strike us,
Or scant our former having in despite.
Why, we have galls; and though we have some grace,
Yet have we some revenge. Let husbands know
Their wives have sense like them: they see, and smell
And have their palates both for sweet and sour,
As husbands have. What is it that they do
When they change us for others? Is it sport?
I think it is. And doth affection breed it?
I think it doth. Is’t frailty that thus errs?
It is so too. And have not we affections,
Desires for sport, and frailty, as men have?
Then let them use us well: else let them know,
The ills we do, their ills instruct us so.

Desdemona

Good night, good night. Heaven me such usage send,
Not to pick bad from bad, but by bad mend!

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT V

SCENE I.
Cyprus. A Street.

Enter Iago and Roderigo.

Iago

Here, stand behind this bulk. Straight will he come.
Wear thy good rapier bare, and put it home.
Quick, quick, fear nothing; I’ll be at thy elbow.
It makes us, or it mars us, think on that,
And fix most firm thy resolution.

Roderigo

Be near at hand, I may miscarry in ’t.

Iago

Here, at thy hand. Be bold, and take thy stand.

[Retires to a little distance.]

Roderigo

I have no great devotion to the deed;
And yet he hath given me satisfying reasons.
’Tis but a man gone. Forth, my sword; he dies.

[Goes to his stand.]

Iago

I have rubb’d this young quat almost to the sense,
And he grows angry. Now, whether he kill Cassio,
Or Cassio him, or each do kill the other,
Every way makes my gain. Live Roderigo,
He calls me to a restitution large
Of gold and jewels that I bobb’d from him,
As gifts to Desdemona.
It must not be. If Cassio do remain,
He hath a daily beauty in his life
That makes me ugly. And besides, the Moor
May unfold me to him; there stand I in much peril.
No, he must die. But so, I hear him coming.

Enter Cassio.

Roderigo

I know his gait; ’tis he. Villain, thou diest! [Rushes out, and makes a pass at Cassio.]

Cassio

That thrust had been mine enemy indeed,
But that my coat is better than thou know’st.
I will make proof of thine.

[Draws, and wounds Roderigo.]

Roderigo

O, I am slain! [Iago rushes from his post, cuts Cassio behind in the leg, and exit.]

Cassio

I am maim’d forever. Help, ho! murder, murder! [Falls.]

Enter Othello.

Othello

The voice of Cassio. Iago keeps his word.

Roderigo

O, villain that I am!

Othello

It is even so.

Cassio

O, help, ho! light! a surgeon!

Othello

’Tis he. O brave Iago, honest and just,
That hast such noble sense of thy friend’s wrong!
Thou teachest me,—minion, your dear lies dead,
And your unbless’d fate hies. Strumpet, I come!
Forth of my heart those charms, thine eyes, are blotted;
Thy bed, lust-stain’d, shall with lust’s blood be spotted.

[Exit.]

Enter Lodovico and Gratiano.

Cassio

What, ho! No watch? No passage? murder, murder!

Gratiano

’Tis some mischance; the cry is very direful.

Cassio

O, help!

Lodovico

Hark!

Roderigo

O wretched villain!

Lodovico

Two or three groan. It is a heavy night.
These may be counterfeits. Let’s think’t unsafe
To come in to the cry without more help.

Roderigo

Nobody come? Then shall I bleed to death.

Enter Iago with a light.

Lodovico

Hark!

Gratiano

Here’s one comes in his shirt, with light and weapons.

Iago

Who’s there? Whose noise is this that cries on murder?

Lodovico

We do not know.

Iago

Did not you hear a cry?

Cassio

Here, here! for heaven’s sake, help me!

Iago

What’s the matter?

Gratiano

This is Othello’s ancient, as I take it.

Lodovico

The same indeed, a very valiant fellow.

Iago

What are you here that cry so grievously?

Cassio

Iago? O, I am spoil’d, undone by villains!
Give me some help.

Iago

O me, lieutenant! What villains have done this?

Cassio

I think that one of them is hereabout,
And cannot make away.

Iago

O treacherous villains!

[To Lodovico and Gratiano.]

What are you there?
Come in and give some help.

Roderigo

O, help me here!

Cassio

That’s one of them.

Iago

O murderous slave! O villain!

[Stabs Roderigo.]

Roderigo

O damn’d Iago! O inhuman dog!

Iago

Kill men i’ the dark! Where be these bloody thieves?
How silent is this town! Ho! murder! murder!
What may you be? Are you of good or evil?

Lodovico

As you shall prove us, praise us.

Iago

Signior Lodovico?

Lodovico

He, sir.

Iago

I cry you mercy. Here’s Cassio hurt by villains.

Gratiano

Cassio!

Iago

How is’t, brother?

Cassio

My leg is cut in two.

Iago

Marry, heaven forbid!
Light, gentlemen, I’ll bind it with my shirt.

Enter Bianca.

Bianca

What is the matter, ho? Who is’t that cried?

Iago

Who is’t that cried?

Bianca

O my dear Cassio, my sweet Cassio! O Cassio, Cassio, Cassio!

Iago

O notable strumpet! Cassio, may you suspect
Who they should be that have thus mangled you?

Cassio

No.

Gratiano

I am sorry to find you thus; I have been to seek you.

Iago

Lend me a garter. So.—O, for a chair,
To bear him easily hence!

Bianca

Alas, he faints! O Cassio, Cassio, Cassio!

Iago

Gentlemen all, I do suspect this trash
To be a party in this injury.
Patience awhile, good Cassio. Come, come;
Lend me a light. Know we this face or no?
Alas, my friend and my dear countryman
Roderigo? No. Yes, sure; O heaven! Roderigo.

Gratiano

What, of Venice?

Iago

Even he, sir. Did you know him?

Gratiano

Know him? Ay.

Iago

Signior Gratiano? I cry you gentle pardon.
These bloody accidents must excuse my manners,
That so neglected you.

Gratiano

I am glad to see you.

Iago

How do you, Cassio? O, a chair, a chair!

Gratiano

Roderigo!

Iago

He, he, ’tis he.

[A chair brought in.]

O, that’s well said; the chair.
Some good man bear him carefully from hence,
I’ll fetch the general’s surgeon.

[To Bianca]

For you, mistress,
Save you your labour. He that lies slain here, Cassio,
Was my dear friend. What malice was between you?

Cassio

None in the world. Nor do I know the man.

Iago

[To Bianca.]

What, look you pale?—O, bear him out o’ the air.

[Cassio and Roderigo are borne off.]

Stay you, good gentlemen.—Look you pale, mistress?
Do you perceive the gastness of her eye?
Nay, if you stare, we shall hear more anon.
Behold her well. I pray you, look upon her.
Do you see, gentlemen? Nay, guiltiness will speak
Though tongues were out of use.

Enter Emilia.

Emilia

’Las, what’s the matter? What’s the matter, husband?

Iago

Cassio hath here been set on in the dark
By Roderigo, and fellows that are ’scap’d.
He’s almost slain, and Roderigo dead.

Emilia

Alas, good gentleman! alas, good Cassio!

Iago

This is the fruit of whoring. Prithee, Emilia,
Go know of Cassio where he supp’d tonight.
What, do you shake at that?

Bianca

He supp’d at my house, but I therefore shake not.

Iago

O, did he so? I charge you go with me.

Emilia

Fie, fie upon thee, strumpet!

Bianca

I am no strumpet, but of life as honest
As you that thus abuse me.

Emilia

As I? Foh! fie upon thee!

Iago

Kind gentlemen, let’s go see poor Cassio dress’d.
Come, mistress, you must tell’s another tale.
Emilia, run you to the citadel,
And tell my lord and lady what hath happ’d.
Will you go on afore?

[Aside.]

This is the night
That either makes me or fordoes me quite.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

ACT V, SCENE II.
Cyprus. A Bedchamber in the castle.

Desdemona in bed asleep; a light burning.

Enter Othello.

Othello

It is the cause, it is the cause, my soul,
Let me not name it to you, you chaste stars!
It is the cause. Yet I’ll not shed her blood,
Nor scar that whiter skin of hers than snow,
And smooth as monumental alabaster.
Yet she must die, else she’ll betray more men.
Put out the light, and then put out the light:
If I quench thee, thou flaming minister,
I can again thy former light restore,
Should I repent me. But once put out thy light,
Thou cunning’st pattern of excelling nature,
I know not where is that Promethean heat
That can thy light relume. When I have pluck’d thy rose,
I cannot give it vital growth again,
It must needs wither. I’ll smell it on the tree.

[Kissing her.]

O, balmy breath, that dost almost persuade
Justice to break her sword! One more, one more.
Be thus when thou art dead, and I will kill thee,
And love thee after. One more, and this the last.
So sweet was ne’er so fatal. I must weep,
But they are cruel tears. This sorrow’s heavenly,
It strikes where it doth love. She wakes.

Desdemona

Who’s there? Othello?

Othello

Ay, Desdemona.

Desdemona

Will you come to bed, my lord?

Othello

Have you pray’d tonight, Desdemona?

Desdemona

Ay, my lord.

Othello

If you bethink yourself of any crime
Unreconcil’d as yet to heaven and grace,
Solicit for it straight.

Desdemona

Alack, my lord, what may you mean by that?

Othello

Well, do it, and be brief, I will walk by.
I would not kill thy unprepared spirit,
No, heaven forfend! I would not kill thy soul.

Desdemona

Talk you of killing?

Othello

Ay, I do.

Desdemona

Then heaven have mercy on me!

Othello

Amen, with all my heart!

Desdemona

If you say so, I hope you will not kill me.

Othello

Hum!

Desdemona

And yet I fear you, for you are fatal then
When your eyes roll so: why I should fear I know not,
Since guiltiness I know not, but yet I feel I fear.

Othello

Think on thy sins.

Desdemona

They are loves I bear to you.

Othello

Ay, and for that thou diest.

Desdemona

That death’s unnatural that kills for loving.
Alas, why gnaw you so your nether lip?
Some bloody passion shakes your very frame.
These are portents; but yet I hope, I hope,
They do not point on me.

Othello

Peace, and be still!

Desdemona

I will so. What’s the matter?

Othello

That handkerchief which I so loved and gave thee,
Thou gav’st to Cassio.

Desdemona

No, by my life and soul!
Send for the man and ask him.

Othello

Sweet soul, take heed, take heed of perjury,
Thou’rt on thy death-bed.

Desdemona

Ay, but not yet to die.

Othello

Yes, presently:
Therefore confess thee freely of thy sin.
For to deny each article with oath
Cannot remove nor choke the strong conception
That I do groan withal. Thou art to die.

Desdemona

Then, Lord have mercy on me!

Othello

I say, amen.

Desdemona

And have you mercy too! I never did
Offend you in my life, never lov’d Cassio
But with such general warranty of heaven
As I might love. I never gave him token.

Othello

By heaven, I saw my handkerchief in ’s hand.
O perjur’d woman, thou dost stone my heart,
And mak’st me call what I intend to do
A murder, which I thought a sacrifice.
I saw the handkerchief.

Desdemona

He found it then.
I never gave it him. Send for him hither.
Let him confess a truth.

Othello

He hath confess’d.

Desdemona

What, my lord?

Othello

That he hath us’d thee.

Desdemona

How? Unlawfully?

Othello

Ay.

Desdemona

He will not say so.

Othello

No, his mouth is stopp’d.
Honest Iago hath ta’en order for ’t.

Desdemona

O, my fear interprets! What, is he dead?

Othello

Had all his hairs been lives, my great revenge
Had stomach for them all.

Desdemona

Alas, he is betray’d, and I undone!

Othello

Out, strumpet! Weep’st thou for him to my face?

Desdemona

O, banish me, my lord, but kill me not!

Othello

Down, strumpet!

Desdemona

Kill me tomorrow, let me live tonight!

Othello

Nay, if you strive,— DESDEMONA.
But half an hour!

Othello

Being done, there is no pause.

Desdemona

But while I say one prayer!

Othello

It is too late.

[Smothers her.]

Emilia

[Within.]

My lord, my lord! what, ho! my lord, my lord!

Othello

What noise is this? Not dead? Not yet quite dead?
I that am cruel am yet merciful,
I would not have thee linger in thy pain.
So, so.

Emilia

[Within.]

What, ho! my lord, my lord!

Othello

Who’s there?

Emilia

[Within.]

O, good my lord, I would speak a word with you!

Othello

Yes. ’Tis Emilia, by and by. She’s dead.
’Tis like she comes to speak of Cassio’s death;
The noise was high.—Ha! no more moving?
Still as the grave. Shall she come in? Were’t good?
I think she stirs again; no. What’s best to do?
If she come in, she’ll sure speak to my wife.
My wife! my wife! what wife? I have no wife.
O, insupportable! O heavy hour!
Methinks it should be now a huge eclipse
Of sun and moon, and that the affrighted globe
Should yawn at alteration.

Emilia

[Within.]

I do beseech you
That I may speak with you, O, good my lord!

Othello

I had forgot thee: O, come in, Emilia.
Soft, by and by; let me the curtains draw.
Where art thou?

[Unlocks the door.]

Enter Emilia.

What’s the matter with thee now?

Emilia

O, my good lord, yonder’s foul murders done!

Othello

What, now?

Emilia

But now, my lord.

Othello

It is the very error of the moon,
She comes more nearer earth than she was wont
And makes men mad.

Emilia

Cassio, my lord, hath kill’d a young Venetian
Call’d Roderigo.

Othello

Roderigo kill’d?
And Cassio kill’d?

Emilia

No, Cassio is not kill’d.

Othello

Not Cassio kill’d! Then murder’s out of tune,
And sweet revenge grows harsh.

Desdemona

O, falsely, falsely murder’d!

Emilia

Alas, what cry is that?

Othello

That? What?

Emilia

Out, and alas! That was my lady’s voice.
Help! help, ho! help! O lady, speak again,
Sweet Desdemona! O sweet mistress, speak!

Desdemona

A guiltless death I die.

Emilia

O, who hath done this deed?

Desdemona

Nobody; I myself. Farewell.
Commend me to my kind lord. O, farewell!

[She dies.]

Othello

Why, how should she be murder’d?

Emilia

Alas, who knows?

Othello

You heard her say herself, it was not I.

Emilia

She said so. I must needs report the truth.

Othello

She’s like a liar, gone to burning hell.
’Twas I that kill’d her.

Emilia

O, the more angel she,
And you the blacker devil!

Othello

She turn’d to folly, and she was a whore.

Emilia

Thou dost belie her, and thou art a devil.

Othello

She was false as water.

Emilia

Thou art rash as fire, to say
That she was false: O, she was heavenly true!

Othello

Cassio did top her; ask thy husband else.
O, I were damn’d beneath all depth in hell,
But that I did proceed upon just grounds
To this extremity. Thy husband knew it all.

Emilia

My husband?

Othello

Thy husband.

Emilia

That she was false to wedlock?

Othello

Ay, with Cassio. Nay, had she been true,
If heaven would make me such another world
Of one entire and perfect chrysolite,
I’d not have sold her for it.

Emilia

My husband?

Othello

Ay, ’twas he that told me first.
An honest man he is, and hates the slime
That sticks on filthy deeds.

Emilia

My husband?

Othello

What needs this iterance, woman? I say thy husband.

Emilia

O mistress, villainy hath made mocks with love!
My husband say that she was false?

Othello

He, woman;
I say thy husband: dost understand the word?
My friend, thy husband, honest, honest Iago.

Emilia

If he say so, may his pernicious soul
Rot half a grain a day! he lies to the heart.
She was too fond of her most filthy bargain.

Othello

Ha!

Emilia

Do thy worst:
This deed of thine is no more worthy heaven
Than thou wast worthy her.

Othello

Peace, you were best.

Emilia

Thou hast not half that power to do me harm
As I have to be hurt. O gull! O dolt!
As ignorant as dirt! Thou hast done a deed
(I care not for thy sword) I’ll make thee known,
Though I lost twenty lives. Help! help, ho! help!
The Moor hath kill’d my mistress! Murder, murder! Enter Montano, Gratiano and Iago.

Montano

What is the matter? How now, general?

Emilia

O, are you come, Iago? You have done well,
That men must lay their murders on your neck.

Gratiano

What is the matter?

Emilia

Disprove this villain, if thou be’st a man.
He says thou told’st him that his wife was false.
I know thou didst not, thou’rt not such a villain.
Speak, for my heart is full.

Iago

I told him what I thought, and told no more
Than what he found himself was apt and true.

Emilia

But did you ever tell him she was false?

Iago

I did.

Emilia

You told a lie, an odious, damned lie;
Upon my soul, a lie; a wicked lie.
She false with Cassio? Did you say with Cassio?

Iago

With Cassio, mistress. Go to, charm your tongue.

Emilia

I will not charm my tongue; I am bound to speak.
My mistress here lies murder’d in her bed.

All

O heavens forfend!

Emilia

And your reports have set the murder on.

Othello

Nay, stare not, masters, it is true indeed.

Gratiano

’Tis a strange truth.

Montano

O monstrous act!

Emilia

Villany, villany, villany!
I think upon’t, I think I smell’t; O villany!
I thought so then. I’ll kill myself for grief.
O villany, villany!

Iago

What, are you mad? I charge you, get you home.

Emilia

Good gentlemen, let me have leave to speak.
’Tis proper I obey him, but not now.
Perchance, Iago, I will ne’er go home.

Othello

O! O! O!

[Hanging over his wife.]

Emilia

Nay, lay thee down and roar;
For thou hast kill’d the sweetest innocent
That e’er did lift up eye.

Othello

[Rising.]

O, she was foul!
I scarce did know you, uncle, there lies your niece,
Whose breath indeed these hands have newly stopp’d.
I know this act shows horrible and grim.

Gratiano

Poor Desdemona! I am glad thy father’s dead.
Thy match was mortal to him, and pure grief
Shore his old thread in twain: did he live now,
This sight would make him do a desperate turn,
Yea, curse his better angel from his side,
And fall to reprobance.

Othello

’Tis pitiful. But yet Iago knows
That she with Cassio hath the act of shame
A thousand times committed; Cassio confess’d it,
And she did gratify his amorous works
With that recognizance and pledge of love
Which I first gave her; I saw it in his hand.
It was a handkerchief, an antique token
My father gave my mother.

Emilia

O heaven! O heavenly powers!

Iago

Come, hold your peace.

Emilia

’Twill out, ’twill out. I peace?
No, I will speak as liberal as the north.
Let heaven and men and devils, let them all,
All, all, cry shame against me, yet I’ll speak.

Iago

Be wise, and get you home.

Emilia

I will not.

[Iago offers to stab his wife.]

Gratiano

Fie!
Your sword upon a woman?

Emilia

O thou dull Moor, that handkerchief thou speak’st of
I found by fortune and did give my husband;
For often with a solemn earnestness,
More than indeed belong’d to such a trifle,
He begg’d of me to steal it.

Iago

Villanous whore!

Emilia

She give it Cassio! no, alas, I found it,
And I did give’t my husband.

Iago

Filth, thou liest!

Emilia

By heaven, I do not, I do not, gentlemen.
O murderous coxcomb! What should such a fool
Do with so good a wife?

Othello

Are there not stones in heaven
But what serve for thunder? Precious villain! [Iago stabs Emilia and then runs out.]

Gratiano

The woman falls. Sure, he hath kill’d his wife.

Emilia

Ay, ay. O, lay me by my mistress’ side.

Gratiano

He’s gone, but his wife’s kill’d.

Montano

’Tis a notorious villain. Take you this weapon,
Which I have here recover’d from the Moor.
Come, guard the door without, let him not pass,
But kill him rather. I’ll after that same villain,
For ’tis a damned slave.

[Exit Montano and Gratiano.]

Othello

I am not valiant neither,
But every puny whipster gets my sword.
But why should honour outlive honesty?
Let it go all.

Emilia

What did thy song bode, lady?
Hark, canst thou hear me? I will play the swan,
And die in music.

[Sings.]

Willow, willow, willow.
Moor, she was chaste. She lov’d thee, cruel Moor,
So come my soul to bliss, as I speak true;
So speaking as I think, I die, I die.

[She dies.]

Othello

I have another weapon in this chamber,
It is a sword of Spain, the ice-brook’s temper.
O, here it is. Uncle, I must come forth.

Gratiano

[Within.]

If thou attempt it, it will cost thee dear;
Thou hast no weapon, and perforce must suffer.

Othello

Look in upon me then, and speak with me,
Or, naked as I am, I will assault thee.

Enter Gratiano.

Gratiano

What is the matter?

Othello

Behold, I have a weapon.
A better never did itself sustain
Upon a soldier’s thigh: I have seen the day
That with this little arm and this good sword
I have made my way through more impediments
Than twenty times your stop. But, O vain boast!
Who can control his fate? ’Tis not so now.
Be not afraid, though you do see me weapon’d.
Here is my journey’s end, here is my butt,
And very sea-mark of my utmost sail.
Do you go back dismay’d? ’Tis a lost fear.
Man but a rush against Othello’s breast,
And he retires. Where should Othello go?
Now, how dost thou look now? O ill-starr’d wench,
Pale as thy smock, when we shall meet at compt,
This look of thine will hurl my soul from heaven,
And fiends will snatch at it. Cold, cold, my girl!
Even like thy chastity.
O cursed, cursed slave! Whip me, ye devils,
From the possession of this heavenly sight!
Blow me about in winds, roast me in sulphur,
Wash me in steep-down gulfs of liquid fire!
O Desdemon! Dead, Desdemon! dead! Oh, oh! Enter Lodovico, Montano, Cassio carried in a chair, and Officers with Iago prisoner.

Lodovico

Where is this rash and most unfortunate man?

Othello

That’s he that was Othello. Here I am.

Lodovico

Where is that viper? Bring the villain forth.

Othello

I look down towards his feet; but that’s a fable.
If that thou be’st a devil, I cannot kill thee.

[Wounds Iago.]

Lodovico

Wrench his sword from him.

Iago

I bleed, sir, but not kill’d.

Othello

I am not sorry neither. I’d have thee live,
For in my sense ’tis happiness to die.

Lodovico

O thou Othello, that wert once so good,
Fall’n in the practice of a damned slave,
What shall be said to thee?

Othello

Why, anything;
An honourable murderer, if you will.
For naught did I in hate, but all in honour.

Lodovico

This wretch hath part confess’d his villany.
Did you and he consent in Cassio’s death?

Othello

Ay.

Cassio

Dear general, I never gave you cause.

Othello

I do believe it, and I ask your pardon.
Will you, I pray, demand that demi-devil
Why he hath thus ensnar’d my soul and body?

Iago

Demand me nothing. What you know, you know.
From this time forth I never will speak word.

Lodovico

What, not to pray?

GRATIANO.

Torments will ope your lips.

Othello

Well, thou dost best.

Lodovico

Sir, you shall understand what hath befall’n,
Which, as I think, you know not. Here is a letter
Found in the pocket of the slain Roderigo,
And here another. The one of them imports
The death of Cassio, to be undertook
By Roderigo.

Othello

O villain!

Cassio

Most heathenish and most gross!

Lodovico

Now here’s another discontented paper,
Found in his pocket too; and this, it seems,
Roderigo meant to have sent this damned villain,
But that, belike, Iago in the interim
Came in and satisfied him.

Othello

O the pernicious caitiff!
How came you, Cassio, by that handkerchief
That was my wife’s?

Cassio

I found it in my chamber.
And he himself confess’d but even now,
That there he dropp’d it for a special purpose
Which wrought to his desire.

Othello

O fool! fool! fool!

Cassio

There is besides in Roderigo’s letter,
How he upbraids Iago, that he made him
Brave me upon the watch, whereon it came
That I was cast. And even but now he spake,
After long seeming dead, Iago hurt him,
Iago set him on.

Lodovico

You must forsake this room, and go with us.
Your power and your command is taken off,
And Cassio rules in Cyprus. For this slave,
If there be any cunning cruelty
That can torment him much and hold him long,
It shall be his. You shall close prisoner rest,
Till that the nature of your fault be known
To the Venetian state. Come, bring away.

Othello

Soft you; a word or two before you go.
I have done the state some service, and they know’t.
No more of that. I pray you, in your letters,
When you shall these unlucky deeds relate,
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; of one whose hand,
Like the base Judean, threw a pearl away
Richer than all his tribe; of one whose subdu’d eyes,
Albeit unused to the melting mood,
Drop tears as fast as the Arabian trees
Their medicinal gum. Set you down this.
And say besides, that in Aleppo once,
Where a malignant and a turban’d Turk
Beat a Venetian and traduc’d the state,
I took by the throat the circumcised dog,
And smote him, thus.

[Stabs himself.]

Lodovico

O bloody period!

Gratiano

All that’s spoke is marr’d.

Othello

I kiss’d thee ere I kill’d thee. No way but this,
Killing myself, to die upon a kiss.

[Falling upon Desdemona.]

Cassio

This did I fear, but thought he had no weapon,
For he was great of heart.

Lodovico

[To Iago.]

O Spartan dog,
More fell than anguish, hunger, or the sea,
Look on the tragic loading of this bed.
This is thy work. The object poisons sight,
Let it be hid. Gratiano, keep the house,
And seize upon the fortunes of the Moor,
For they succeed on you. To you, lord governor,
Remains the censure of this hellish villain.
The time, the place, the torture, O, enforce it!
Myself will straight aboard, and to the state
This heavy act with heavy heart relate.

[Exeunt.°]

they leave

Notes