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< &ffysioj& f >( & ^ st ^ Jbr ajc t and imaginat ive | l& 4 tt « rj ^* l epffiiuc ^ t # an i ^ cakpla ^ e degree ; and < every eictcfltiSff froltj J 'the laborious glasses to tfe number ^ of thpjs e who H ^ Bi £ u (^ lf t ^ s 6 rt for enjoyment , as their scanty leisure allows , to ttie Nat ? 6 nal Gallery , to the British Museum , the musical instrument , the intellectual novel , or the poem , is an indication , so -far ;? of a progressive elevation of the motives for exertion , as well / as an earnest pf the benefits which such an elevation has a tendency vU llCllCV / t * . ¦ ' . ' ¦ ¦ - - - ¦ - ¦ > * X II : _ 3 fiV JLj « X /» — ' ¦ ' ¦ ' : ¦ ' ¦ ^ 'Li : 3 iW *
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" IAGO . A CRITICAL STUDY . ; i By the Translator of Hoffman s Muter acker I' -
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To me , Othello has ever appeared the most powerful of the plays of Shakspeare ; and one hardly ever well understood . Ask an admirer bf Shakspeare—there will be no great difficulty in finding qne—to acquaint you with the argument of the tragedy of Qtjieilo , the Moor of Venice ? The chances are one to one thausand that he answers , with perhaps ? a siuile on his face , — " the jealousy of Othello . " True it is that Othello murders Desdemona through jealousy , * but what causes . . . that
jealousy 3- *? £ phe Mainspring of the tragedy , the cause of the jealousy of 'Othello i 9 the jealousy of Iago . He , Iago , is more particularly the ^ jealoMB man—he is intensely , savagely , jealous . His description ^ tQ Othello of the passion are not dyawn merely through the incitements of a devilish nialice , l ?» Ujt are a tlfati&eript of those feelings that have , as he says him ^ lf to himself— " Like a poisonous mineral , gnawn my inwards /' What is jeaidusy ? It is a state of mind caused by the irritation of self-68 t ^ em ; br , to speak phrenologicatly , feecretive-Hess and Love of Approbation , in combination with Amativeness , or Acquisitiveness , or both , or any other faculty or f »^ ufti ^« flr 9 nt 5 | f which we derive or desire enj oyment . Tli o Pha-Ihftc ^ cr ' oflago is the personification of peculiar ^ el fr ^ teerj ^ , Seet ^ iveitiedB / Acquisitiveness , Conibativenejs ^ wd J ^
esftruc-• Cajaridge says no : jealousy ihvolves suspicion , And dihtlfo'tiBito die- revert © of a ¦ uip . cioufi character . ' It Was' midden « d Ihdignatiun at discovering the impurity and fklwhood of one ho had believed perfect unddevoted . ^ -ED ^
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212 " lago . "
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" I am not what I am / '
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 1, 1837, page 212, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1830/page/22/
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