____ murder of ____ could also stem from the general hatred of ____that he displays. ____certainly seems to take great ____in preventing ____from enjoying ____happiness, and he expresses his ____for Othello frequently and effusively. It is ____talent for understanding and ____the desires of those around him that makes him both a powerful and a ____figure. The play depicts ____contradictorily as a ____, faithful wife and as a bold, ____personality. ____, ____is apparently aware of her ____death. She, not ____, asks ____to put her ____sheets on the bed, and she asks Emilia to bury her in these sheets should she ____first. Beginning with the ____lines of the play, ____remains at a distance from much of the action that concerns and affects him. Roderigo and ____refer ____to a “he” or “him” for much of the first scene. When they begin to specify whom they are talking about, especially once they stand beneath ____window, they do so with ____epithets, not names. Although ____is a ____and racial outsider in ____, his skill as a ____and leader is nevertheless ____and necessary to the state, and he is an integral part of Venetian civic ____. The speech that ____his ____is a tale that could woo almost anyone. It is the ____between Othello’s ____at the hands of a foreign culture and his own willingness to ____himself that makes him a ____figure rather than simply ____ridiculous ____. In his final moments, ____pleads for an ____account of his life and actions, highlighting his concern with how his ____will be ____after his death. This request ____his desire for truth, reflecting his complex ____with his public ____. Othello’s concern for how he will be remembered ____the theme of reputation, as he seeks a ____that is neither embellished nor ____distorted. This line reveals Othello’s awareness of his tragic ____and the importance of reputation, even in death, as a way to preserve some sense of dignity. ____shows only a small amount of ____as to what ____plans to do with it, and accepts his refusal to tell her. These actions suggest that Emilia, at least initially, is at best ____, and at worst ____in Iago’s schemes. As the action ____, ____reveals a sharp-eyed and ____ perspective on how women are often ____to abuse at the hands of their ____. As she realizes the role her ____has played in bringing about ____death, ____insists on outing ____plot, stating in front of ____that “your reports have set the murder on” ____. ____dies hoping that her final ____will ____her previous silence and obedience: “So come my soul to bliss, as I speak true” (5.2.), but her death also shows that within the world of the ____, there is no promise of a happy ____for a ____. ____functions mainly to move the plot forward by ____becoming a ____in ____plan. His thoughts, feelings, and motivations are rarely revealed, but his character and ____are ____for creating the conditions under which Iago can enact his ____. ____behaviour is rooted in a deep sense of ____: when ____tries to get him to say ____things about Desdemona, he insists on being ____, observing “An inviting eye—and yet methinks right modest” ____. Perhaps because ____is a ____, and not a ____, or because he seems to lack the ____experience of some of the other male characters, he is rather ____and trusting. Cassio’s ____and trust that other people will see his virtue makes him a ____character to ____. ________as a ____and loving wife is destroyed by ____lies, and she feels the weight of her ____name. Her sense of being “undone” reflects the ____damage to her reputation, affecting how she sees herself and how she believes others ____her. This line reveals the vulnerability of women’s reputations in the play, where they are often at the mercy of men’s perceptions and ____.

Othello Character Analysis

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