Othellos Involved Imagery

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    Othellos Involved Imagery

    The intricate imagery peppering the language of the characters in Shakespeares drama Othello is

    deserving of our detailed consideration in this paper. It has significant meaning, and nearly expresses a

    life of its own.

    The plays imagery is oftentimes reflective of the fortunes of the protagonist. As the Moors status

    declines, the quality of theimageryin the play declines. In The Riverside Shakespeare Frank Kermode

    explains the relationship between imagery andOthellos jealousy:

    It is very important to see that Othellos self-estimateone not easily jealious, but, being wrought, /

    Perplexed in the extreme (V.ii.345-46)is, as Bradley says, perfectly just, and perfectly consistent

    with the release of unsuspected grossness of language and imagery under the shock of discovering

    infidelity in the loved one. The peculiar pain of sexual jealousy is deeply involved with the excremental

    aspect of the sexual organs, and the emotion in betrayal in a supremely intimate trust is involved with

    agonizing associations of filth and animality. (1200)

    A surprising, zoo-like variety of animal injury occur throughout the play. Kenneth Muir, in the

    Introduction to William Shakespeare: Othello, explains the conversion of Othello through his increased

    use of animal imagery:

    Those who have written on the imagery of the play have shown how the hold Iago has over Othello is

    illustrated by the language Shakespeare puts into their mouths. Both characters use a great deal of

    animal imagery, and it is interesting to note its distribution. Iagos occurs mostly in thefirst threeActs of

    the play: he mentions, for example, ass, daws, flies, ram, jennet, guinea-hen, baboon, wild-cat, snipe,

    goats, monkeys, monster and wolves. Othello, on the other hand, who makes no use of animal imagery

    in the first two Acts of the play, catches the trick from Iago in Acts III and IV. The fondness of both

    characters for mentioning repulsive animals and insects is one way by which Shakespeare shows the

    corruption of the Moors mind by his subordinate. (21-22)

    Just how strong a force is the imagery in this drama? Is it more powerful than the chorus in ancient

    http://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=imageryhttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=imageryhttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=imageryhttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=othellohttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=othellohttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=othellohttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=first+threehttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=first+threehttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=first+threehttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=first+threehttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=othellohttp://www.123helpme.com/search.asp?text=imagery
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    Greek tragedy? H. S. Wilson in his book of literary criticism, On the Design of Shakespearean Tragedy,

    discusses the influence of the imagery of the play:

    It has indeed been suggested that the logic of events in the play and of Othellos relation to them

    implies Othellos damnation, and that the implication is pressed home with particular power in the

    imagery. This last amounts to interpreting the suggestions of the imagery as a means of comment by the

    author the analogy would be the choruses of Greek tragedy. It is true that the play contains many

    references to heaven and hell and devils. as Wilson Knight has pointed out. But Mr. Knight has wisely

    refrained from drawing the conclusion that Shakespeare means thus to comment upon Othellos

    ultimate fate. (66)

    The vulgar imagery of the ancient dominate the opening of the play. Francis Ferguson in Two

    Worldviews Echo Each Other describes the types of imagery used by the antagonist when he slips his

    mask aside while awakening Brabantio:

    Iago is letting loose the wicked passion inside him, as he does from time to time throughout the play,

    when he slips his mask aside. At such moments he always resorts to this imagery of money-bags,

    treachery, and animal lust and violence. So he expresses his own faithless, envious spirit, and, by the

    same token, his vision of the populous city of VeniceIagos world, as it has been called. . . .(132)

    Standing outside the senators home late at night, Iago uses imagery within a lie to arouse the occupant:

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

    bags! When the senator appears at the window, the ancient continues with coarse imagery of animal

    lust: Even now, now, very now, an old black ram / Is topping your white ewe, and you'll have your

    daughter covered with a Barbary horse; you'll have your nephews neigh to you; you'll have coursers for

    cousins and gennets for germans. Brabantio, judging from Iagos language, rightfully concludes that the

    latter is a profane wretch and a villain.

    When Iago returns to the Moor, he resorts to violence in his description of the senator, saying that nine

    or ten times / I had thought to have yerk'd him here under the ribs. Othello responds to the antagonist

    with a whole new set of imagery which is respectable, non-violent, and worthy of imitation; he speaks of

    his family lineage and the open sea:

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    I fetch my life and being

    From men of royal siege, and my demerits

    May speak unbonneted to as proud a fortune

    As this that I have reach'd: for know, Iago,

    But that I love the gentle Desdemona,

    I would not my unhoused free condition

    Put into circumscription and confine

    For the sea's worth. (1.2)

    Meanwhile, Iago, in his answer to Cassios question about the general, refers again to money as the

    motivating force in Othellos marriage to Desdemona: Faith, he to-night hath boarded a land carack: / If

    it prove lawful prize, he's made for ever. After Brabantio and his search party have reached the Moor,

    he quiets their passions with imagery from nature: Keep up your bright swords, for the dew will rust

    them.The senator, thinking that his daughter has been enchanted by the Moor, employs related

    imagery in his confrontation with the general: If she in chains of magic were not bound, foul charms,

    drugs or minerals / That weaken motion, practiser of arts inhibited, prison, bond-slaves and

    pagans. Standing before the Duke of Venice and the City Council, Othello defends his marriage against

    the vehement accusations of the senator with

    reference to his narration in the senators home of the battles,sieges, fortunes which he had

    experienced. Christian imagery is seen in his mention of Desdemona, who wish'd / That heaven had

    made her such a man, and his wife immediately supports his statement with her own testimony.

    With the matter of Brabantios accusations settled, the council and the general turn to the Ottoman

    advance upon Cyprus. As Othello begins discussion of this matter, his imagery becomes hard and

    unfeeling with expressions such as the flinty and steel couch of war,

    hardness, wars. Contrasting with this imagery is the soft, love-centered imagery of Desdemona, who

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    attests that to his honour and his valiant parts / Did I my soul and fortunes consecrate, and who refers

    to herself as a moth of peace. She seems to draw the general into her soft ways, as he responds that

    when light-wing'd toys / Of feather'd Cupid seal with wanton dullness [. . .] Let housewives make a

    skillet of my helm mythological and domestic imagery. For a military leader to be peppering his

    language with allusions to Cupid and to housewives is a rarity indeed!

    Another rarity of the play is the audiences seeing Iago acting toward good and not toward evil. In the

    instance when he talks Roderigo out of committing suicide over the loss of Desdemona, the ancient

    employs decent, wholesome imagery:

    Our bodies are our 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. (1.3)

    The ancients motive in this seemingly generous gesture is found in his words shortly thereafter: Put

    money in thy purse; follow thou the wars; defeat thy favour with an usurped beard; I say, put money in

    thy purse. He cannot bear the thought of terminating the stipend from his wealthy friend.

    With the action now relocated to the island of Cyprus, it is Michael Cassio who, in answering Montano

    regarding the Moors marital status, says that Othellos wife excels the quirks of blazoning pens, our

    great captain's captain, Give renew'd fire to our extincted spirits, The riches of the ship, and other

    highly flattering imagery for her. Waiting at the harbor in Cyprus, Iago employs imagery critical of his

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    Emilia: Sir, would she give you so much of her lips / As of her tongue she oft bestows on me, to the

    extent that Desdemona labels him a slanderer. The cunning ancient beguiles the unsuspecting Cassio

    into a drunken state, thus costing him his lieutenancy. Generous-hearted Desdemona agrees to

    intercede with the general. Shallow Emilia turns over the decorated handkerchief to Iago out of

    selfishness, asking what he will give her in return. Iagos sinister machinations enmesh Cassio and

    Desdemona in a web of adultery that exists only in the mind of the ancient and his victim, the Moor,

    whom he ensnares in Act 3. The general is nave and gullible to the suggestions of honest Iago, for to

    Othello the world is empty of human life as we know it, but filled with the sense of far-off, heroic

    adventure. His love for Desdemona is utterly defenseless in a world that contains Iago. . . . (Ferguson

    132-33). In her book, Everybodys Shakespeare: Reflections Chiefly on the Tragedies, Maynard Mack

    comments on the imagery of darkness and how it supports the evil schemes of the ancient:

    Just now, however, as we listen to his plans evolve, the darkness seems chiefly to be Iagos element. In

    the darkness of this Venetian street, he moves to disrupt Othellos marriage if he can. Later, in the

    darkness of a street in Cyprus, he will close his trap on Cassio, involving him in a scuffle that will cost him

    his lieutenancy. Still later, in the dark island outpost, he will set Roderigo to ambush Cassio, and so (he

    hopes) be rid of both. Simultaneously, in a darkness that he has insinuated into Othellos mind,

    Desdemona will be strangled. (134)

    After Othello interrogates Emilia as to his wifes closeness to Cassio, he talks with Desdemona. The

    conversation between these two is replete with spiritual imagery: heaven (repeatedly), devils,

    honest, hell, soul, cherubim, fountain from which my current runs, and Christian. The senses

    of touch and smell are appealed to with the Moors words here:

    O, ay; as summer flies are in the shambles,

    That quicken even with blowing. O thou weed,

    Who art so lovely fair and smell'st so sweet

    That the sense aches at thee, would thou hadst

    ne'er been born! (4.3)

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    Desdemona, in her final verbal exchange with her maid Emilia, shares a presentiment with bedroom

    imagery: If I do die before thee prithee, shroud me / In one of those same sheets. In Act 5, when the

    general hears Cassios cries during and after Roderigos ambush, the Moor hastens to his bedroom

    where Desdemona is asleep. His deliberation on the mode of death for her suffocation involves

    considerable imagery: Yet I'll not shed her blood; / Nor scar that whiter skin of hers than snow, / And

    smooth as monumental alabaster. He reflects, with both mythical and nature imagery, that when he

    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 the rose,

    I cannot give it vital growth again.

    It must needs wither: I'll smell it on the tree. (5.2)

    His words to the waking wife contain spiritual imagery: Have you pray'd to-night, Desdemona? and If

    you bethink yourself of any crime / Unreconciled as yet to heaven and grace, / Solicit for it straight, and

    I would not kill thy unprepared spirit; / No; heaven forfend! I would not kill thy soul. Then

    Desdemonas replies gravitate toward the spiritual: Then heaven / Have mercy on me! and Then Lord

    have mercy on me! and never loved Cassio / But with such general warranty of heaven, and But

    while I say one prayer! Othello is deaf to her pleas, and he suffocates her.

    Shortly thereafter Emilia appears and informs the protagonist that Cassio is alive; this news prompts the

    use of some musical imagery by the Moor: Not Cassio kill'd! then murder's out of tune, / And sweet

    revenge grows harsh. Othello confesses his guilt for Desdemonas murder, which occasions a brief

    imagery-laden exchange between himself and Emilia:

    EMILIA: O, the more angel she,

    And you the blacker devil!

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    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! ((5.2)

    When Othello confesses that he acted because Desdemona gave Cassio the kerchief-gift from the

    general, Emilia blurts out her protest through imagery:

    '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. (5.2)

    Emilia pays for her honesty with her life; and Othello makes an imagery-laden farewell to his

    Desdemona before stabbing himself to death:

    Cold, cold, my girl!

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    Even like thy chastity. O 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 Desdemona! Desdemona! dead! (5.2)

    Imagery within this play is not to be taken lightly; it is very significant to the audience. In the essay Wit

    and Witchcraft: an Approach to Othello Robert B. Heilman discusses the significance of imagery within

    this play:

    Reiterative language is particularly prone to acquire a continuity of its own and to become an

    independent part of the plot whose effect we can attempt to gauge. It may create mood or

    atmosphere: the pervasiveness of images of injury, pain, and torture in Othello has a very strong

    impact that is not wholly determined by who uses the images. But most of all the system of imagery

    introduces thoughts, ideas, themeselements of the meaning that is the authors final organization of

    all his materials. (333)

    David Bevington in William Shakespeare: Four Tragedies comments that the imagery in the play is quite

    mundane, and he tells why:

    The battle of good and evil is of course cosmic, but in Othello that battle is realized through a taut

    narrative of jealousy and murder. Its poetic images are accordingly focused to a large extent on the

    natural world. One cluster of images is domestic and animal, having to do with goats, monkeys, wolves,

    baboons, guinea hens, wildcats, spiders, flies, asses, dogs, copulating horses and sheep, serpents, and

    toads; other images, more wide-ranging in scope, include green-eyed monsters, devils, blackness,

    poisons, money purses, tarnished jewels, music untuned, and light extinguished. (217)

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    WORKS CITED

    Bevington, David, ed. William Shakespeare: Four Tragedies. New York: Bantam Books, 1980.

    Ferguson, Francis. Two Worldviews Echo Each Other. Readings on The Tragedies. Ed. Clarice Swisher.

    San Diego: Greenhaven Press, 1996. Reprint from Shakespeare: The Pattern in His Carpet. N.p.: n.p.,

    1970.

    Heilman, Robert B. Wit and Witchcraft: an Approach to Othello. Shakespeare: Modern Essays in

    Criticism. Ed. Leonard F. Dean. Rev. Ed. Rpt. from The Sewanee Review, LXIV, 1 (Winter 1956), 1-4, 8-10;

    and Arizona Quarterly (Spring 1956), pp.5-16.

    Kermode, Frank. Othello, the Moor of Venice. The Riverside Shakespeare. Ed. G. Blakemore Evans.

    Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1974.

    Mack, Maynard. Everybodys Shakespeare: Reflections Chiefly on the Tragedies. Lincoln, NB: University

    of Nebraska Press, 1993.

    Muir, Kenneth. Introduction. William Shakespeare: Othello. New York: Penguin Books, 1968.

    Shakespeare, William. Othello. In The Electric Shakespeare. Princeton University. 1996.

    http://www.eiu.edu/~multilit/studyabroad/othello/othello_all.html No line nos.

    Wilson, H. S. On the Design of Shakespearean Tragedy. Canada: University of Toronto Press, 1957.

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