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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Untitled Article
j ^ d ge e * h £ rwi § e ? for consider that soliloquy of Jag ^ wbich « 0 ii 41 u ^ e 8 t 6 e flwt scene of the second act ; there flwi trttti illi ^ a mrt . He s&ys , —* ¦ - ¦ . . *¦ ¦• : . v-^ h > <* Thd thought whereof Doth , Bile a poisonous mineral , gnaw my inwards "
And he is not only jealous of Othello and determined to be " even with him—wife for wife / ' but he is actually jealous of Michael Cassio : — " For I fear Cassio with my night-cap tod . " ] $ ow , is this character understood ? How is Iago represented ? A black-muzzled fellow , with a continual viltenbus sneer ! This is a gross mistake . Iago was no sneerer ; if he
hjtd sneered he would never have been called honest Iago . " mitt sneerers are called clever , and are hated ; poor sneerers irf called wicked , and are hated . I picture to myself Iago as & iniddle-sized man , neither very dark , nor fair ; with the gfcit of a soldier , broad-chested , muscular arms , a massive head ,
rather plain face , with a sword-scar on his cheek and nearly across his nose . * Sneer he does not , but his large reflective OTgans , topemding into that quick perception of the ridiculous , which is considered a characteristic of all men of large mental powers , aire subdued by his Secretiveness combined with his
other propensities , into a dry , sarcastic htimOiir ,- * --as witness his jests , coarse language , equivoques , and his drinking songs . He is no sneerer . He is a man of action- ^—in continual thought and action for his own interests . He says himself , and acts tipon the saying , —
< , . " Dull not device by coldness and delay . " Nb btte of the characters in the tragedy judge him to be a ffa $ rose in&ti , titiuch more a wicked man . His wife even , to i $ 0 x lie , ( ail all men do , discovers most of his natural temper , Ijjp ^ HSi 6 huh only as her " wayward husband . "f Through X tTti lJmJ ik I , S ' i . i ¦ ' ¦ '¦ „ '
• This last characteristic of the scar , we think very fine and true , as also his gait , bearing and stature ; but the portrait does not entirely agree with our idea . "We think of lago as a swarthy man , with a large strong-marked mouth , and prominent , bony nose j somewhat over-hanging eye-brows and eye-lids , with small , clear , dark-Brown e ^ es j bf sinewy frame , and large bones rather than very muscular . Alto - gfttner a hanasome , dark , officer like man , who has seen hard actual service , having risen from the ranks by superior energies of mind and body , all tending to immediate action . —Ed . J't AtaJfc * of him !"—true ; but what doe * she think ? What would her lQqttJsay ?^ - £ D . - Desdkmona . Alas , Ihi has no speech . t , Ixao . In faith too much . : t find it still when % have hit to sleep , Sht put * her tbngua « littlt in her heart , And Glides with thinki ™ .
Untitled Article
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), April 1, 1837, page 214, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/vm2-ncseproduct1830/page/24/
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