Themes of Love in Shakespeare's Othello
- Created by: jocastle
- Created on: 02-05-16 20:27
Fullscreen
Romantic Love
- "She loved me for the dangers I had passed/And I loved her that she did pity them" - Othello, Act 1 Scene 3, Lines 166-7. Love as healing, or as mutual sympathy in times of despair
- "And this, and this, the greatest discords be/That e'er our hearts shall make." - Othello, Act 2 Scene 1, Lines 190-1. Serious irony and tempting fate, idealism
Love and Sex
- "if I be left behind/A moth of peace, and he go to the war,/The rites for which I love him are bereft me" - Desdemona, Act 1 Scene 3, Lines 251-3. Consummation of marriage, Elizabethan gender roles and female sexuality, marital sex
- "We have reason to cool our raging motions, our carnal stings, our unbitted lusts" - Iago, Act 1 Scene 3, Lines 321-3. Lust as an animal instinct separate from human intelligence, sex as a completely primitive thing
- "Her name, that was as fresh/As Dian's visage, is now begrimed and black/As mine own face" - Othello, Act 3 Scene 3, Lines 387-9. Elizabethan fear of female sexuality, ideas about virginity and purity and then conversely corruption
- "Let husbands know/Their wives have sense like them" - Emilia, Act 4 Scene 3, Lines 89-90. Female perspective on sexual desire- Elizabethan ideal of outward female chastity versus the reality that women also have the capacity to desire
- "The fountain from the which my current runs/Or else dries up- to be discarded thence/Or keep it as a cistern for foul toads/To knot and gender in!" - Othello, Act 4 Scene 2, Lines 58-61. Sex as procreation, perhaps a dehumanising view of Desdemona- 'fountain' reduces her to her womb and capacity to have children, and adultery corrupts and ruins her from the inside out
Love and Loss
- "I had rather adopt a child than get it" - Brabantio, Act 1 Scene 3, Line 189. Familial/parental love: betrayal, ideas about bloodlines and blood relations, Elizabethan patriarchy and paternal ownership of daughters
- "Like the base Indian, threw a pearl away/Richer than all his tribe" - Othello, Act 5 Scene 2, Lines 343-4. Loss through disposal. Ironic echo of one of Othello's first monologues, talking of his exotic adventures seducing Desdemona- tales of far-off things are now what he uses to describe losing her
- "I will not charm my tongue; I am bound to speak:/My mistress here lies murdered in her bed" - Emilia, Act 5 Scene 2, Lines 183-4. Urge for revenge and justice; female power and avengement
- "O Spartan dog,/More fell than anguish, hunger, or the sea,/Look upon the tragic loading of this bed" - Lodovico, Act 5 Scene 2, Lines 357-9. Different meaning to a loaded bed
Social Conventions and Taboos
- "an old black ram/Is tupping your white ewe" - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1, Lines 89-90. Black/white dichotomy shown throughout the play; ideas about 'worth' in society and in love; livestock analogy?
- "the devil will make a grandsire of you" - Iago, Act 1 Scene 1, Line 92. Elizabethan racist stereotype with the devil…
Comments
No comments have yet been made