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 merely from contempt for Othello’s intellect. He can trust him to use violence, but thinks he may bungle anything that requires adroitness.

(3) When the conversation breaks off here (225) Iago has brought Othello back to the position reached at the end of the Temptation scene ( iii.). Cassio and Desdemona are to be killed; and, in addition, the time is hastened; it is to be ‘tonight,’ not ‘within three days.’

The constructional idea clearly is that, after the Temptation scene, Othello tends to relapse and wait, which is terribly dangerous to Iago, who therefore in this scene quickens his purpose. Yet Othello relapses again. He has declared that he will not expostulate with her ( i. 217). But he cannot keep his word, and there follows the scene of accusation. Its dramatic purposes are obvious, but Othello seems to have no purpose in it. He asks no questions, or, rather, none that shows the least glimpse of doubt or hope. He is merely torturing himself.

 

(1) ii. 71 f. Desdemona demands that Cassio be sent for to ‘confess’ the truth that she never gave him the handkerchief. Othello answers that Cassio has confessed the truth—has confessed the adultery. The dialogue goes on:

It is a ghastly idea, but I believe Shakespeare means that, at he mention of Iago’s name, Desdemona suddenly sees that he is the villain whose existence he had declared to be impossible when, an hour before, Emilia had suggested that someone had poisoned Othello’s mind. But her words rouse Othello to such furious