Because he is dead.
The actual quote is "And yet by heaven I think my love as rare..." The quote was written by none other than William Shakespeare. It was from the sonnet, Sonnet 130. This whole sonnet is based around Shakespeare's light-hearted mocking of the conventional sonnet.
"Have you introduced your girlfriend to your dog?"
In Othello, Shakespeare alludes to cats as green-eyed monsters in the way that they play with mice before killing them. Iago: O, beware, my lord, of jealousy; It is the green-eyed 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! But no green-eyed monster ever made any physical appearance in anything from Shakespeare!
not yet
A long time because it was not yet introduced in America yet.
No, violins had not yet been invented in Shakespeare's day. He may have played other musical instruments: we don't know.
Othello has many more than two speeches in the play. The only idea we have about what effect the play may have had on contemporary audiences comes from a letter written in September 1610 by Henry Jackson, describing a performance in Oxford: "But that Desdemona, murdered by her husband in our presence, although she always pled her case excellently, yet when killed moved us more, while stretched out on her bed she begged the spectators' pity with her very facial expression."
Hollywood has not yet been introduced as part of Poptropica.
She wasn't alive during "Shakespeare's time". She was born 300 years after Shakespeare's daughter Susannah. Women could and did write during "Shakespeare's time" but not women who had not yet been born.
The correct line from Romeo and Juliet by William Shakespeare is "Wilt thou be gone? it is not yet near day".
Take your pick. Othello is manipulated by Iago who is a master at the craft of manipulating people and does the same to Cassio and Roderigo. Although it would be hypothetically possible for Othello to shake off Iago's influence, in practical terms it would be extremely difficult. Although Othello has control over his actions, his perspective is skewed by Iago's manipulation. So in one sense it was his own doing that he struck Desdemona publicly and murdered her privately, and yet he was doing so in response to a false belief that has been implanted in him and would be nearly impossible to resist. You may say, "But no matter what Desdemona had done, Othello should have known it was wrong to kill." And yet people kill others all the time, knowing it to be wrong and yet believing that there is an overriding moral reason for doing so. And before you say that preventing a woman from seducing more men is no kind of moral reason, think about the ludicrous moral reasoning which justified blowing up the World Trade Centre or sending troops to slaughter tens of thousands of Iraquis.
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