Othello
Terms
undefined, object
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- Othello: My perfect...
- Othello: My perfect soul will manifest me rightly
- Othello: Keep up...
- Othello: Keep up your bright swords, for the dew will rust them
- Othello: For know Iago...
- Othello: For know Iago, but that I love Gentle Desdemona
- Othello: Were it my cue...
- Othello: Were it my cue to fight I should have known without a prompter
- Brabantion: Would ever have... run...
- Brabantio: Would ever have... run from her guardage to the sooty bosom of such a thing as thou
- Iago: I follow him...
- Iago: I follow him to serve my own turn upon him
- Iago: This counter...
- Iago: This counter-caster, (in good time) must his lieutenant be
- Iago: Not I for love...
- Iago: No I for love and duty, but seeming so, for my peculiar* end
- Iago: I follow...
- Iago: I follow but myself...
- Iago: Call up her...
- Iago: Call up her father, rouse him, make after him, poison his delight
- Iago: You'll have your daughter ...
- Iago: You'll have your daughter cover'd with a barbery horse
- Iago: I must show out a...
- Iago: I must show out a flag, and a sign of love/ which is indeed but a sign
- Roderigo: Had my...
- Roderigo: Had my purse as if the strings were thine
- Roderigo: Thick-...
- Roderigo: Thick-lips
- Othello: Rude am...
- Othello: Rude am I, in my speech
- Othello: Since these arms....
- Othello: Since these arms of mine, had seven years' pith
- Othello: If you do find me foul,...
- Othello: If you do find me foul, in her report, let your sentence even fall upon my life
- Othello: She lov'd me for...
- Othello: She lov'd me for the dangers I had pass'd, and I lov'd her that she did pity them
- Othello: (After Brabantio warning) honest...
- Othello: Honest Iago
- Iago: Thus do I ever...
- Iago: Thus do I ever make my fool my purse
- Iago: When she is sated...
- Iago: When she is sated with his body, she will find the error of her choice
- Iago: 'Twixt my sheets...
- Iago: 'Twixt my sheets he (Othello) has done my office
- Iago: Hell, and night...
- Iago: Hell, and night, must bring this monstrous birth, to the world, light
- Desdemona: So much I challenge...
- Desdemona: So much I challenge, that I may profess due to the moor my lord
- Brabantio: Courrupted by...
- Brabantio: Corrupted by spells, and medicines
- Brabantio: Here is...
- Brabantio: Here is the man; this moor
- Brabantio: She has deciv'd...
- Brabantio: She has deciv'd her father and may do thee
- Duke: Bloody...
- Duke: Bloody books of law
- Othello: If after every tempest...
- Othello: If after every temptest, come such calms, may the winds blow, till they have wakened death, and let the labouring bark climb hills of seas Olimpus high
- Iago: (Women are) wild-cats...
- Iago: (Women are) wild-cats in your kitchens, saints in your injuries
- Iago: If such tricks...
- Iago: If such tricks as these strip you out of your lieutenantry
- Iago: Very nature...
- Iago: Very nature will instruct her in it, and compel her to some second choice
- Iago: (Cassio is) A supper...
- Iago: (Cassio is) A supper, and subtle knave, a finder of occation
- Iago: The wine she...
- Iago: The wine she drinks is made of grapes
- Iago: (Cassio) hath leaped...
- Iago: (Cassio) hath leaped into my seat
- Cassio: (Storms) Do omit...
- Cassio: (Storms) Do omit their mortal natures, letting go safely by the devine Desdemona
- Desdemona: Our loves...
- Desdemona: Our loves and comforts should increase even as our days do grow
- Iago: So will I turn her...
- Iago: So will I turn her virtue into pitch
- Othello: Cassio I love...
- Othello: Cassio I love thee, but never more an officer of mine
- Othello: And passion...
- Othello: And passion (having my best judgement collied) assays to lead the way
- Iago: (Cassio's) A soldier fit...
- Iago: (Cassio's) A soldier fit to stand by ceasar
- Iago: Our generals wife is...
- Iago: Our generals wife is now the general
- Iago: I'll pour...
- Iago: I'll pour this pestilance in his ear
- Cassio: I have very...
- Cassio: I have very poor and unhappy brains for drinking
- Cassio: Do not think...
- Cassio: Do not think gentlemen, I am drunk
- Cassio: Repu...
- Cassio: Ruputation, reputation, reputation. Oh I have lost my reputation
- Cassio: Transform...
- Cassio: Transform ourselves into beasts
- Cassio: I am much...
- Cassio: I am much bound to you.
- Othello: What is 't...
- Othello: What is 't you mean?... What dost thou say
- Othello: I will de...
- Othello: I will deny thee nothing (x2)
- Othello: But I do love...
- Othello: But I do love thee: And when I love the not, chaos is come again
- Othello: By heaven, thou echost...
- Othello: By heaven, thou echost me; as if there were some monster in thy thought
- Othello: Certain, men should be...
- Othello: Certain, men should be what they seem
- Othello: I do not but think...
- Othello: I do not but think Desdemona honest
- Othello: Any yet how nature...
- Othello: And yet how nature erring from itself
- Othello: Haply, for I am...
- Othello: Haply, for I am black, and have not the soft parts of conversation that chambers have: Or for I am declined into the vale of years
- Othello: She's gone. I am...
- Othello: She's gone. I am abus'd, and my relief must be the loathe her
- Othello: My name...
- Othello: My name... now bigrim'd and black as my own face
- Othello: Give me...
- Othello: Give me a living reason she's disloyal
- Othello: Like the pontic...
- Othello: Like the pontic sea...compulsive course
- Othello: I'll tear...
- Othello: I'll tear her all to pieces
- Iago: Ha? I...
- Iago: Ha? I like not that -> Nothing my lord
- Iago: I think that....
- Iago: I think that he is honest -> Men should be what they seem
- Iago: Jealousy...
- Iago: Jealousy, it is the freen eye'd monster that doth mock the meat it feeds on
- Iago: In Venice, they do let...
- Iago: In Venice, they do let God see the pranks they dare not show their husbands
- Iago: Not poppy...
- Iago: Not poppy, or mandragona, nor all the drowsy syrups of the world shall ever medicine thee
- Iago: Would you the supervision...
- Iago: Would you the supervision grossly gape on? Behold her topp'd?
- Iago: (Prick'd by...
- Iago: (Prick'd by foolish honesty and love)
- Iago kne...
- Iago kneels: Wit, hands, heart to wronged Othello's service
- Iago: It is a common...
- Iago: It is a common thing - to have a foolish wife
- Iago: (Cassio) would gripe...
- Iago: (Cassio) would gripe, and wring my hand... laid his leg over my thigh
- Desdemona: That's an...
- Desdemona: That's an honest fellow
- Desdemona: If I do vow...
- Desdemona: If I do vow friendship I'll perform it
- Desdemona: His bed...
- Desdemona: His bed shall seem a school
- Desdemona: Be as your fancies..
- Desdemona: Be as your fancies teach you: Whate'er you be, I am obedient
- Emilia: She let it...
- Emilia: She let it drop by negligence, and to th' advantage, I being here, took 't up
- Othello: Liberal heart...
- Othello: Liberal heart: Hot, hot and moist... a young, and sweating devil here
- Othello: In her prophetic...
- Othello: In her prophetic fury sew'd the work: The worms were hallow'd
- Desdemona: I think the sun...
- Desdemona: I think the sun where he was born drew all such humours from him
- Desdemona: Come, come: You'll never...
- Desdemona: Come, come: You'll never meet a more sufficient man.
- Desdemona: We must think...
- Desdemona: We must think that men are not gods
- Emilia: (Jealousy) is a...
- Emilia: (Jealousy) is a monster begot upon itself, born on itself
- Othello: Handkerchief:...
- Othello: Handkerchief: Confessions: Handkerchief... nose, ears, and lips: is 't posible
- Othello: Crying oh dear...
- Othello: Crying oh dear Cassio as it were: His gesture imports it
- Othello: How shall I...
- Othello: How shall I murther him Iago?
- Othello: I would have him...
- Othello: I would have him nine years a-killing
- Othello: My heart is...
- Othello: My heart is turned to stone: I strike it, and it hurts my hand
- Othello: If the earth sould teem with...
- Othello: If the earth should teem with women's tears, each one she falls, would prove a crocodile
- Othello: She can turn...
- Othello: She can turn, and turn: and yet go on and turn again
- Cassio: Rub him...
- Cassio: Rub him about the temples
- Iago: Lie...
- Iago: Lie... with her? On her: what you will
- Iago: Work on...
- Iago: Work on, my medicine works
- Iago: Do it not with...
- Iago: Do it not with poison, strangle her in her bed, even the bed she hath contaminated
- Roderigo: Faith I have heard too...
- Roderigo: Faith I have heard too much, for your words and your performance are no kin together
- Desdemona: I understand a...
- Desdemona: I understand a fury in your words, but not the words
- Desdemona: Who is thy...
- Desdemona: Who is thy lord... I have none
- Iago: Now I see there's mettle...
- Iago: Now I see there's mettle in thee... give me thy hand roderigo
- Roderigo: O damn'd...
- Roderigo: O damn'd Iago! O inhumane dog!
- Iago: It makes...
- Iago: It makes us, or it mars us, think on that
- Iago: (Cassio) hath a daily...
- Iago: (Cassio) hath a daily beauty in his life, that makes me ugly
- Othello: Those charms thine...
- Othello: Those charms thine eyes, are blotted, thy bed lust-stain'd, shall with lust's blood be spotted
- Emilia: 'Twill...
- Emilia: 'Twill out
- Desdemona: A guitless...
- Desdemona: A guiltless death, I die (Em: Who did it?) Nobody: I myself
- Iago: From this time forth...
- Iago: From this time forth I will never speak a word
- Iago: Get thee...
- Iago: Get the home (x2) ...Hold your peace
- Othello: I will kill...
- Othello: I will kill thee and love thee after
- Othello: It is the cause...
- Othello: It is the cause (my soul), let me not name it to you, you chaste stars
- Othello: Else she'll...
- Othello: Else she'll betray more men
- Othello: I would not kill...
- Othello: I would not kill thy unprepaired spirit... I would not kill thy soul
- Othello: Hath all his hairs...
- Othello: Hath all his hairs been lives, my great revenge had stomach for them all
- Othello: Tis Emilia...
- Othello: Tis Emilia: by and by. She's dead... Shall she come in? Were 't good?
- Othello: Whip me ye devils...
- Othello: Whip me ye devils from the possession of this heavenly sight
- Othello: When you shall these unlucky...
- Othello: When you shall these unlucky deeds relate, speak of me as I am. Nothing Extenuate
- Othello: I have done the state...
- Othello: I have done the state some service and they know 't