i am not what i am | iago to roderigo |
father from hence not trust your daughters minds/but what you seem them act | barbantio to roderigo |
by Janus i think no | iago to othello |
good signior you shall command more with your years than with your weapons | othello to barbantio |
i think this tale would win my daugther too good barbantio, take up this mangled matter at its best | duke to barbantio |
so please your grace,my ancient/ a man he is of honesty and trust/ to his conveyance i assign my wife | othello to duke |
your son-in-law is far more far than black | duke and barbantio |
look at her moor, if thoust hast eyes to see/ she has decived her father and may thee | barbantio to othello |
let us be conjunctive in our revenge against him | iago to roderigo |
the moor is of a free and open nature/ that thinks men honest that but seem to be so/ and will as tenderly be let by the nose/ as asses are | iago to himself |
oh, you are well tuned now/ but i will set down the pegs that make this music/ as honest as i am | iago to himself |
provoke him that he may, for even out of that will i cause the off Cyprus to mutiny/ whose qualifications shall come into no true taste again but by the dis planting of cassio | iago to rederigo |
yet that i put the moor/at least into jealously so strong/ that judgement cannot cure | iago to himself |
knavery’s plain face is never seen till used | iago to himself |
she’s a most exquisite lady | cassio to iago |
if i can fasten but one cup upon him/ with that which he hath drunk tonight already/ he’ll be as full of quarrel and offense/ as a mistress’ young dog | iago to himself |
and ’tis great pity tha the noble moor/ should hazard such a place as his own second/ with one of an ingraft infirmity | montano to iago |
i had rather have this tongue cut from my mouth/ than it should do offense to Micheal cassio/ yet i persuade myself to speak the truth/ shall nothing wrong him | iago to othello |
i know, iago/ thy honesty and love doth mince this matter/ making it light to cassio | othello to iago |
reputation, reputation, reputation! oh, i have lost my reputation i have lost the immortal part of myself, and what remains is bestial. my reputation, iago, my reputation | cassio to iago |
our generals wife is now the genreal | iago to cassio |
confess yourself freely to her. importune her help to put you in your place again | iago to cassio |
and whats he that says i play the villian | iago to himself |
so i will turn her virtue into pitch, and out of her won goodness make the net that shall enmesh them all | iago to himself |
men should be what they seem or those that be not, would they might seem none | iago to himself |
utter my thoughts? why, say they are vile and false | iago to othello |
i do not think but Desdemonas honest | othello to iago |
why did i marry? this honest creatures doubtless sees and know more, much more, than he unfolds | othello to himself |
do not you chide i have a thing for you | Emilia to iago |
oh, now forever farewell the tranquil mind, farewell content | othello to iago |
farewell othellos occupation gone | othello to iago |
i think my wife be honest and think she is not. it think that thou art just and think thou are not. ill have some proff | othello to iago |
i know not madam | emilia to desdeomona |
there’s magic in the web of it | othello to desdemona |
they are not ever jealous for the cause, but are jealous for they are jealous. its a monster begot upon itself, born on itself | Emilia to desdemona |
her honor is an essence that’s not seen; they have it very oft that have it not | iago to othello |
for i will make him tell the tale anew, where, how,how oft, how long ago, and when, he hath and is again to cope your wife | iago to othello |
if any wretch have put this in your head, let heavan requite it with the serpents curse | Emilia to othello |
faith, i have heard too much, and your words and performances are no kin together | roderigo to othello |
the worlds a huge thing. it is a great price/ for a small vice | emilia to desdemona |
the ills we do, their ills instruct us so | emilia to desdemona |
o! o! o! | othello |
i told him what i thought, and told no more, than what he found himself was apt and true | iago to emilia |
nobody, i myself, farewell | desdemona to emilia |
i would not kill they unprepared spirit | othello to desdemona |
oh, damned iago oh, inhuman dog | roderigo to othello |
now, whether he kill cassio, or cassio him, or each do kill the other, every way makes my gain | iago to himself |
let heavan and men and devils, let them all cry shame agaisnt me, yet i’ll speak | emilia to crowd |
othello quotes
July 2, 2019