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      • Othello enters, frantic and furious, and says to Iago that he would have been happier to be deceived than to suspect. He shouts farewell to war and his "occupation's gone" (3.3.357).
      www.litcharts.com/lit/othello/act-3-scene-3
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  2. Notably, Iago is left wounded but alive at the end of the play. Cassio is charged with determining Iago’s punishment, and urges “the time, the place, the torture, oh, enforce it” (5.2.). The ending symbolizes the culmination of the violent forces put in motion by Iago at the start of the play.

    • Iago

      At the end of Act I, scene iii, Iago says he thinks Othello...

  3. Quick answer: The significance of Iago's final line in Othello, "Demand me nothing; what you know, you know. From this time forth I never will speak word" (5.2.347-348), lies in his resolute...

  4. At the end of Act I, scene iii, Iago says he thinks Othello may have slept with his wife, Emilia: “It is thought abroad that ’twixt my sheets / He has done my office” (I.iii. 369–370).

  5. OTHELLO and IAGO exit. Actually understand Othello Act 3, Scene 3. Read every line of Shakespeare’s original text alongside a modern English translation.

  6. Iago responds to Othello's demand for visible proof with the most circumstantial, unverifiable evidence. And Othello, overcome by jealousy, accepts it. Notice also that Othello immediately thinks of killing Desdemona.

  7. Jul 28, 2019 · Iago is unpunished at the end of the play. His fate is left in Cassio’s hands. The audience believes that he will be punished, but it's left open for the audience to wonder whether he will get away with his evil plans by concocting another deception or violent act.

  8. Angry at having been passed over by Othello for promotion to the rank of lieutenant, and also because he seems to enjoy creating mayhem for its own sake, Iago develops an intricate conspiracy to ruin Othello.

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