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 indignation (‘Out, strumpet! Weep’st thou for him to my face?’) that ‘it is too late.’

(2) ii. 286 f.

Are Iago’s strange words meant to show his absorption of interest in himself amidst so much anguish? I think rather he is meant to be alluding to Othello’s words, and saying, with a cold contemptuous smile, ‘You see he is right; I am a devil.’

 

I have said that the last scene of Othello, though terribly painful, contains almost nothing to diminish the admiration and love which heighten our pity for the hero (p. 198). I said ‘almost’ in view of the following passage ( ii. 123 ff):

This is a strange passage. What did Shakespeare mean us to feel? One is astonished that Othello should not be startled, nay thunder-struck, when he hears such dying words coming from the lips of an obdurate adulteress. One is shocked by the moral blindness or obliquity which takes them only as a further sign of her worthlessness. Here alone, I think, in the scene