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Iago The Puppetmaster

of hers than snow … If I quench thee … I can again thy former light restore … But once put out thy light … I know not where is that Promethean heat that can thy light relume …. (V.ii.1-13).This farewell puts Othello at full-realization of his action. He motivates himself with the repetition of “it is the cause” while bringing himself to see Desdemona’s beauty and the grief of letting her go. Othello compares Desdemona’s beauty to the light of a candle and the vital growth of a rose. With the death of Desdemona and the revelation of the truth, Othello’s anguish fills his heart with guilt resulting in him taking his own life over the body of his wife, his friend, his love.Othello’s Iago and Othello enter the battlefields of passion as they emotionally claw their ways through their sinister days. Iago embodies the cunning and deceptive warrior strategically mapping out his enemy, Othello, the powerful one-man army built for strength. The cunning warrior slyly waits for the opportunity to attack. He looks for that brief moment the gargantuan beast lets down his guard. With a final blow the beast is dead; for he was unaware that danger was always lurking behind him. Iago enters the emotions of Othello through his venomous words. Iago, as the deceitful warrior, delivers the final blow upon Othello through his dialect, which severs him both psychologically and physically, from his true emotions with the iniquitous knife of malice and jealousy. ...

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