Casio asks Desdemona to ask Othello to reinstate Iago. This is all per Iago's request. ChaCha!
Othello and Desdemona are deeply in love with each other, even though they are very different. Othello has led a life of adventure; Desdemona has hardly been outside her house. Othello is middle-aged; Desdemona is in he late teens or early twenties. Othello is a foreigner who has won his place by merit; Desdemona is from an important Venetian family and has her social status by birth. Othello is dark-skinned; Desdemona is pale. Othello is also very humble, which makes him feel that he is unwarrantably lucky to have the love of a woman like Desdemona. This virtue should enhance their relationship, but it is unfortunately also the chink in Othello's armour through which Iago attacks, making Othello feel that Desdemona must also consider him unworthy of her love.
towards the end. Cause they started from the bottom, now they there! Cha-Cha!
This is one instance of Shakespeare trying to alienate Othello. Throughout the play, Shakespeare uses phrases to show how different Othello is; coming from a different country and having colored skin.
Cassio kisses Desdemona's hand. Iago says, " 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."
Yes, Othello was foolish in the play. He had believed the lies that Iago told him that Cassio was sleeping with his wife Desdemona. And the fact that Desdemona had been wrongfully unfaithful to him. These incidents were not true led him to believe that it is all real. So definitely Othello was mistakenly foolish indeed. He had found out that Desdemona was innocent but a little bit too late when Othello ultimately committed suicide out of horrifying guilt. From another point of view it is a bit harsh to call Othello foolish. He is subjected to a sophisticated campaign of manipulation by Iago, who is a master at it. Very few people would have been able to resist Iago, mostly because he always appeared to resist saying that Desdemona and Cassio were having an affair, which made his suggestion that they were the more plausible. Othello, the play starts with the possibility of a war against the 'Ottomites,' which rhymes with sodomites. But anyway, Othello is supposedly a successful army leader, and the play sets out to show how and why he is successful as a man of war. He lives in a violent universe, and his solutions are violent. The war is transported to the war of the sexes, as there is a lot of talk about the relations between men and woman, in regard to love and marriage.
Othello and Desdemona are deeply in love with each other, even though they are very different. Othello has led a life of adventure; Desdemona has hardly been outside her house. Othello is middle-aged; Desdemona is in he late teens or early twenties. Othello is a foreigner who has won his place by merit; Desdemona is from an important Venetian family and has her social status by birth. Othello is dark-skinned; Desdemona is pale. Othello is also very humble, which makes him feel that he is unwarrantably lucky to have the love of a woman like Desdemona. This virtue should enhance their relationship, but it is unfortunately also the chink in Othello's armour through which Iago attacks, making Othello feel that Desdemona must also consider him unworthy of her love.
towards the end. Cause they started from the bottom, now they there! Cha-Cha!
This is one instance of Shakespeare trying to alienate Othello. Throughout the play, Shakespeare uses phrases to show how different Othello is; coming from a different country and having colored skin.
Cassio kisses Desdemona's hand. Iago says, " 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."
Yes, Othello was foolish in the play. He had believed the lies that Iago told him that Cassio was sleeping with his wife Desdemona. And the fact that Desdemona had been wrongfully unfaithful to him. These incidents were not true led him to believe that it is all real. So definitely Othello was mistakenly foolish indeed. He had found out that Desdemona was innocent but a little bit too late when Othello ultimately committed suicide out of horrifying guilt. From another point of view it is a bit harsh to call Othello foolish. He is subjected to a sophisticated campaign of manipulation by Iago, who is a master at it. Very few people would have been able to resist Iago, mostly because he always appeared to resist saying that Desdemona and Cassio were having an affair, which made his suggestion that they were the more plausible. Othello, the play starts with the possibility of a war against the 'Ottomites,' which rhymes with sodomites. But anyway, Othello is supposedly a successful army leader, and the play sets out to show how and why he is successful as a man of war. He lives in a violent universe, and his solutions are violent. The war is transported to the war of the sexes, as there is a lot of talk about the relations between men and woman, in regard to love and marriage.
He responded "How likely is it that I'll be able to show them to you actually in bed together??" As Iago well knew, this would not only be difficult but actually impossible since Desdemona and Cassio were not really having an affair. But as we know from people who believe in conspiracy theories, and Iago knew then, sometimes you can bamboozle people into believing that the fact that something is difficult to prove is in itself proof. Unfortunately it works on Othello.
I think he dismissed him because he doesnt show any respect for Othello and for anyone else.
A flow proof is a proof that uses arrows to show the flow of a logical argument.
A flow proof is a proof that uses arrows to show the flow of a logical argument.
To show what is true
That I have to show how I got that
Proof