Want this question answered?
Iago says that he was sleeping next to Cassio and that Cassio was having a dream about making love to Desdemona.
Iago says, "Do it not with poison. Strangle her in her bed, even the bed she hath contaminated." Iago's advice is to kill her in her bed, not to use the bedsheet (you could strangle someone that way, but that's not what Iago says). Othello responds with "Good, good! The justice of it pleases! Very good!"
So he can keep on cheating him out of his money. As long as Roderigo is prepared to pay Iago to pay court to Desdemona, Iago will keep on pocketing the money and persuading him to pay more. It is only when Roderigo says he will go to Desdemona and demand his cash back that Iago takes action.
Nobody really understands why Iago hates Othello; at one time he says that he suspects Othello of having seduced his wife Emilia. Possibly he hates Othello because Othello is a parvenu, a jumped-up galley slave no less, whereas Iago is of the established Venetian nobility. He seems to hate Cassio for a similar reason. Or again, he may be like Cassius in Julius Caesar--simply jealous. Whatever his reason, it is clear that Iago actually doesn't care about anyone in the world except Iago. He is totally selfish as the quotation "in following him I follow but myself" shows. Iago serves as Othello's ensign ("following him") only because it enables him to pursue his own agenda ("follow myself").
Iago (not Lago!) says in the play 'Othello' "I am not what I am". This is insinuating that he is acting and hiding the person who he really is. He is pretending to be someone he is not.
When Iago says "I am not what I am," he is revealing his deceitful nature and manipulative character. He is suggesting that his outward appearance does not reflect his true intentions or identity, emphasizing that he is cunning and deceptive.
Iago says that he was sleeping next to Cassio and that Cassio was having a dream about making love to Desdemona.
Iago says, "Do it not with poison. Strangle her in her bed, even the bed she hath contaminated." Iago's advice is to kill her in her bed, not to use the bedsheet (you could strangle someone that way, but that's not what Iago says). Othello responds with "Good, good! The justice of it pleases! Very good!"
Actually the question should have been, "What does 'Thou told'st me thou didst hold him in thy hate' mean?" It is from Act I of Shakespeare's play, Othello. In modern English it means, "You told me that you hated him". Roderigo and Iago are arguing about Iago's loyalty to Othello. Roderigo says, "You (Iago) told me (Roderigo) that you (Iago) hated him (Othello). For more information, read the play.
If you mean Iago from Othello, he is the standard bearer of General Othello. Iago hates the general and plots to make Othello think his wife is having an affair.
So he can keep on cheating him out of his money. As long as Roderigo is prepared to pay Iago to pay court to Desdemona, Iago will keep on pocketing the money and persuading him to pay more. It is only when Roderigo says he will go to Desdemona and demand his cash back that Iago takes action.
He says that they have their own mind and think freely as they wish.
Nobody really understands why Iago hates Othello; at one time he says that he suspects Othello of having seduced his wife Emilia. Possibly he hates Othello because Othello is a parvenu, a jumped-up galley slave no less, whereas Iago is of the established Venetian nobility. He seems to hate Cassio for a similar reason. Or again, he may be like Cassius in Julius Caesar--simply jealous. Whatever his reason, it is clear that Iago actually doesn't care about anyone in the world except Iago. He is totally selfish as the quotation "in following him I follow but myself" shows. Iago serves as Othello's ensign ("following him") only because it enables him to pursue his own agenda ("follow myself").
Iago (not Lago!) says in the play 'Othello' "I am not what I am". This is insinuating that he is acting and hiding the person who he really is. He is pretending to be someone he is not.
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."
He says that Othello placed Cassio as his lieutenant instead of him.
It might mean that your hamster is active. So if a person says that then that's what might have meant