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Essays from FratFiles.com
  1. Critism On Othello

    ... Othello is, in one sense of the word, by far the most romantic figure among
    Shakespeare's heroes; and he is so partly from the strange life of war and ...

  2. Othello Is, In One Sense Of The Word, By Far The Most Romantic ...

    Mr. ~*~ Othello is, in one sense of the word, by far the most romantic figure among
    Shakespeare's heroes; and he is so partly from the strange life of war and ...

  3. “The Plotting Of Iago Is Both Incredible And Without Substance ...

    ... and after Cassio’s promotion he forms the plan to gain revenge on Othello. ... will speak
    a word”, could be seen in two contexts, one in the sense that Iago ...

  4. Othello

    ... According to Dictionary.com, machismo is, “a strong or exaggerated sense of manliness ...
    II.i.213-217) This is just one of the times Othello sincerely speaks ...

  5. Is The Relationship Between Othello And Desdemona As It’S ...

    ... that he is very controlled with a sense of dignity. ... after suitor and yet she marries
    the one man who ... The elopement of Desdemona and Othello may be perceived as ...

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Mr

Submitted by vladulbroka on November 2, 2005

Category: English
Words: 8813 | Pages: 36
Views: 268
Popularity Rank: 34,471
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

~*~
Othello is, in one sense of the word, by far the most romantic figure among Shakespeare's heroes; and he is so partly from the strange life of war and adventure which he has lived from childhood. He does not belong to our world, and he seems to enter it we know not whence -- almost as if from wonderland. There is something mysterious in his descent from men of royal
siege; in his wanderings in vast deserts and among marvelous peoples; in his tales of magic handkerchiefs and prophetic Sibyls; in the sudden vague glimpses we get of numberless battles and sieges in which he has played the hero and has borne a charmed life; even in chance references to his baptism, his being sold to slavery, his sojourn in Aleppo. And he is not a merely romantic figure; his own nature is romantic. He has not, indeed, the meditative or speculative imagination of Hamlet; but in the strictest sense of the word he is more poetic than Hamlet. Indeed, if one recalls Othello's most famous speeches
-- those that begin, "Her father loved me", "O now for ever", "Never, Iago", "Had it pleased Heaven", "It is the cause", "Behold, I have a weapon", "Soft you, a word or two before you go"
- and if one places side by side with these speeches an equal number by any other hero, one will not doubt that Othello is the greatest poet of them all. There is the same poetry in his casual phrases -- like "These nine moons wasted", "Keep up your bright swords, for the dew will rust
them", "You chaste stars", "It is a sword of Spain, the ice-brook's temper", "It is the very error of the moon" -- and in those brief expressions of intense feeling which ever since have been taken as the absolute expression, like
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,
or
If she be...

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