because his wife told othello the truth that it was iago's plan to seperate desdemona and othello
Iago has multiple plans: a plan to cozen Roderigo out of his money in order to make Iago rich, a plan to discredit Cassio so that Iago can get a promotion, a plan to have Cassio and Roderigo kill each other so that there will be nobody to implicate Iago and a plan to get Othello to discredit himself and kill Desdemona because Iago hates them, possibly because they love each other and he has never loved anyone.
To take away Desdemona from Othello
He has a number of "immediate plans" at various stages of the play.
no Iago is. Iago is the planner and causes the conspiracy of the play. iago tricks Othello and rodrigo
because his wife told othello the truth that it was iago's plan to seperate desdemona and othello
Iago has multiple plans: a plan to cozen Roderigo out of his money in order to make Iago rich, a plan to discredit Cassio so that Iago can get a promotion, a plan to have Cassio and Roderigo kill each other so that there will be nobody to implicate Iago and a plan to get Othello to discredit himself and kill Desdemona because Iago hates them, possibly because they love each other and he has never loved anyone.
To take away Desdemona from Othello
He has a number of "immediate plans" at various stages of the play.
no Iago is. Iago is the planner and causes the conspiracy of the play. iago tricks Othello and rodrigo
Iago is extremely jealous of both Cassio and Othello. His plan is to make Othello believe that Desdimonia has committed adultery with Cassio. That way, Cassio will be fired from his high military status and Othello will loose the love of his life (Desdimonia, his wife.)
Iago's plan in Shakespeare's "Othello" was to manipulate Othello into believing that his wife, Desdemona, was unfaithful in order to seek revenge on Othello for promoting Cassio over him. He wanted to destroy Othello's happiness and reputation.
It would make it seem that Iago did his part in the plan, where Iago kills Cassio and Othello kills Desdemona. Even though Iago got Roderigo to do it for him.
Neither. Othello was the captain, Cassio the lieutenant and Iago the ensign.
No. Othello did not kill Iago. He killed Desdemona (he thought he did justice). Then, the truth came out. Othello charged at Iago but was stopped by others at that scene. Then Iago ran away, and Othello killed himself; died upon a kiss on Desdemona.
Iago is, although he is more likely to get others to do bad things than to do them himself. He does murder Roderigo, after egging him on to kill Cassio. He also induces Othello to murder Desdemona.The villain in Othello is Iago as he twists Othello's mind and gets him to kill Desdemona, steals from Roderigo and kills him, kills Emilia, wounds Cassio and ruins his job.
Othello promoted Cassio as his lieutenant instead of Iago.