Othello as tragedy of evil, Evil
in Iago
Personification of Evil: Unlike
Hamlet where evil is pervasive and hangs over the whole country. In Othello,
it is personified in one character who wears the mask of seeming virtue. In
Iago, we see evil as deception and as a direct challenge to the order and
harmony of the universe. Iago’s superficial brilliance and self-control is
the ‘reason’ for renaissance skepticism which in Shakespeare’s day, was
challenging the great vision of harmony and order.
Iago as the Evil Force: Despite
his hypocrisy, Iago reveals himself to the reader as an active force of evil
right from the first scene of the play. It is Roderigo alone who is given the
insight into Iago; but he is foolish and doesn’t understand the implications of
Iago’s plans. Iago stands for social disintegration. He is not one of the
servants who get paid by their masters for their service and are loyal to them.
He is the wicked one whose loyalty is a mask.
Iago’s Egotism: The supreme
egotism of Iago is a manifestation of the code of ‘reason’ by which he lives.
True human reason in terms of Renaissance Christian humanism was a
reflection of the supreme wisdom of God. And it consisted in submitting one’s
will to the purposes of Go. Iago’s reason is the sin of pride, for it denies
the supremacy of God and sees man as the sole author of his destiny, able to
control himself and others by the power of his mind. It is expressed in his
speech to Roderigo which begins the words “Virtue! A fig! ‘tis in ourselves
that we are thus or thus.” And also where he compares our bodies to gardens. In
denying the purposes of thepower of God, Iago strikes at the very roots of Christian Humanism.
He is only a lust of the blood and a permission of the will. He is conceited
and excessively proud of his intelligence and wisdom which ultimately cause the
fall of his personality.
Iago’s Self-betrayal: Iago’s
betrayal of himself is quite expected and possible despite Bradley’s wonder
that how his supreme intellect should finally betray him into such colossal
errors as his misjudging the relationship between Othello and
Desdemona and the character of his own wife, Emilia. But it is in the very
nature of Iago’s intellect that he should be so. He sees that Desdemona’s
love for the Moor was only animal lust and nothing else. He can
perceive only the outward appearance of Othello; he can’t see the
qualities for which Desdemona married him; and thus their relationship seems
only a product of lust which lust must destroy. Out of Iago’s failure of
perception will come his own destruction, but his failure is inherent in the
very ‘reason’ by which he lives.
Views about Iago: The
audience doesn’t have the same views about Iago as the other characters in the
play do. The audience knows him to be a Semi-devil. The very incarnation of
Devil and the negation of moral values.To the audience, he is devil;
but to Othello, he is ‘Honest Iago.’ Honest is very much like that of
Claudius in Hamlet. He stands for false appearance and it is fitting that
Shakespeare should give the celebrated lines:
Who steals my purse steals trash
But he that filches from me my
good name
Robs me of that which not
enriches him
And makes me poor indeed.
Such a concern for reputation is
a manifestation of pride
Iago versus Othello: Iago
personifies evil in the guise of good whereas in Othello himself, we
have a depiction of true virtue which seems to be wearing many of the signs of
evil. As in Cinthio’s story, Othello’s wedding with Desdemona was unnatural.
Cinthio doesn’t mention the blackness of the Moor, mentioning it only once
in the story. In the Renaissance, the color blackwas a symbol of lechery.
It was so commonly used in the books that it was also the color of the devil
whose redness is a fairly recent innovation. To Shakespeare’s audience, Othello would
have all the outward appearance of the blacker devil which Amelia calls him.
His marriage to Desdemona would appear as aberration in nature.
Iago awakens Brabantio with a description ofthe marriage in these terms,
punctuated by images of brute sexuality - comparing Othello to a
black ram who is going to take advantage of Brabantio’s white ewe.
Unnaturalness and Appearance: The
first two acts of the play these themes, the evil of the unnatural marriage and
that of Iago’s mask of seeming virtue. Othello has the blackness of
Satan, Iago the whiteness of truth and virtue. True virtue bears the mark of
evil and evil is marked with the semblance of honesty. Shakespeare
assures the audience that of the falsity of these outward sign, that Iago is
seemingly honest and that Othello, despite his appearance, is a man of
true nobility whom Desdemona can love for his ‘honours and his valiant parts’.
We see his dignity before the consul where he denies the very lechery which his
outward color represents. Shakespeare’s deliberate reversal of normal
appearance is so shocking that the audience must be left till incredulous, with
an uncertain fear that appearance be still be truth. This fear is supported by
Brabantio’s warning:
Look to her, Moor, if thou hast
eyes to see
She has deceived her father, and
may thee
Upon this seeming violation of
nature, Iago will work his temptation of Othello and under Iago’s
influence; Othello will see Desdemona exactly Brabantio has see
her.
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