Motifs
Motifs are recurring structures, contrasts, and literary
devices that can help to develop and inform the text’s major themes.
Sight and Blindness
When Desdemona asks to be allowed to accompany Othello to Cyprus, she
says that she “saw Othello’s visage in his mind, / And to his honours and his
valiant parts / Did I my soul and fortunes consecrate” (I.iii. 250–252). Othello’s
blackness, his visible difference from everyone around him, is of little
importance to Desdemona: she has the power to see him for what he is in a way
that even Othello himself cannot. Desdemona’s line is one of many references to
different kinds of sight in the play. Earlier in Act I, scene iii, a senator
suggests that the Turkish retreat to Rhodes is
“a pageant / To keep us in false gaze” (I.iii.19–20).
The beginning of Act II consists entirely of people staring out to sea, waiting
to see the arrival of ships, friendly or otherwise. Othello, though he demands
“ocular proof” (III.iii.365), is frequently
convinced by things he does not see: he strips Cassio of his position as
lieutenant based on the story Iago tells; he relies on Iago’s story of seeing
Cassio wipe his beard with Desdemona’s handkerchief (III.iii.437–440); and he believes Cassio to be dead simply
because he hears him scream. After Othello has killed himself in the final
scene, Lodovico says to Iago, “Look on the tragic loading of this bed. / This
is thy work. The object poisons sight. / Let it be hid” (V.ii.373–375). The action of the play depends heavily on
characters not seeing things: Othello accuses his wife although he never
sees her infidelity, and Emilia, although she watches Othello erupt into a rage
about the missing handkerchief, does not figuratively “see” what her husband
has done.
Plants
Iago is strangely preoccupied with plants. His speeches to Roderigo in
particular make extensive and elaborate use of vegetable metaphors and
conceits. Some examples are: “Our bodies are our gardens, to which our wills
are gardeners; so that if we will plant nettles or sow lettuce, set hyssop and
weed up thyme . . . the power and corrigible authority of this lies in our
wills” (I.iii.317–322); “Though other things grow
fair against the sun, / Yet fruits that blossom first will first be ripe”
(II.iii.349–350); “And then, sir, would he gripe
and wring my hand, / Cry ‘O sweet creature!’, then kiss me hard, / As if he
plucked kisses up by the roots, / That grew upon my lips” (III.iii.425–428). The first of these examples best explains
Iago’s preoccupation with the plant metaphor and how it functions within the
play. Characters in this play seem to be the product of certain inevitable,
natural forces, which, if left unchecked, will grow wild. Iago understands
these natural forces particularly well: he is, according to his own metaphor, a
good “gardener,” both of himself and of others.
Many of Iago’s botanical references concern poison: “I’ll pour this
pestilence into his ear” (II.iii.330); “The Moor
already changes with my poison. / Dangerous conceits are in their natures
poisons, / . . . / . . . Not poppy nor mandragora / Nor all the drowsy
syrups of the world / Shall ever medicine thee to that sweet sleep” (III.iii.329–336). Iago cultivates
his “conceits” so that they become lethal poisons and then plants their seeds
in the minds of others. The organic way in which Iago’s plots consume the other
characters and determine their behavior makes his conniving, human evil seem
like a force of nature. That organic growth also indicates that the minds of
the other characters are fertile ground for Iago’s efforts.
Animals
Iago calls Othello a “Barbary horse,” an
“old black ram,” and also tells Brabanzio that his daughter and Othello are
“making the beast with two backs” (I.i.117–118).
In Act I, scene iii, Iago tells Roderigo, “Ere I would say I would drown myself
for the love of a guinea-hen, I would change my humanity with a baboon” (I.iii.312–313). He then remarks that drowning is for “cats
and blind puppies” (I.iii.330–331). Cassio
laments that, when drunk, he is “by and by a fool, and presently a beast!”
(II.iii.284–285). Othello tells Iago, “Exchange
me for a goat / When I shall turn the business of my soul / To such
exsufflicate and blowed surmises” (III.iii.184–186).
He later says that “[a] horned man’s a monster and a beast” (IV.i.59). Even Emilia, in the final scene, says that she
will “play the swan, / And die in music” (V.ii.254–255).
Like the repeated references to plants, these references to animals convey a
sense that the laws of nature, rather than those of society, are the primary
forces governing the characters in this play. When animal references are used
with regard to Othello, as they frequently are, they reflect the racism both of
characters in the play and of Shakespeare’s contemporary audience. “Barbary horse” is a vulgarity particularly appropriate in
the mouth of Iago, but even without having seen Othello, the Jacobean audience
would have known from Iago’s metaphor that he meant to connote a savage Moor.
Hell, Demons, and Monsters
Iago tells Othello to beware of jealousy, the “green-eyed monster which doth
mock/ The meat it feeds on” (III.iii.170–171).
Likewise, Emilia describes jealousy as dangerously and uncannily
self-generating, a “monster / Begot upon itself, born on itself” (III.iv.156–157). Imagery of hell and damnation also recurs
throughout Othello, especially toward the end of the play, when Othello becomes
preoccupied with the religious and moral judgment of Desdemona and himself.
After he has learned the truth about Iago, Othello calls Iago a devil and a
demon several times in Act V, scene ii. Othello’s earlier allusion to “some
monster in [his] thought” ironically refers to Iago (III.iii.111). Likewise, his vision of Desdemona’s betrayal is
“monstrous, monstrous!” (III.iii.431). Shortly
before he kills himself, Othello wishes for eternal spiritual and physical
torture in hell, crying out, “Whip me, ye devils, / . . . / . . . roast me in
sulphur, / Wash me in steep-down gulfs of liquid fire!” (V.ii.284–287). The imagery of the monstrous and diabolical
takes over where the imagery of animals can go no further, presenting the
jealousy-crazed characters not simply as brutish, but as grotesque, deformed,
and demonic.
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