星月文学

ACT FOUR   Scene One

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[Cyprus.Before the castle.Enter OTHELLO and IAGO]

IAGO

Will you think so?

OTHELLO

Think so,Iago!

IAGO

What,

To kiss in private?

OTHELLO

An unauthorizedkiss.

IAGO

Or to be nakedwith her friend in bed

An hour or more,not meaning any harm?

OTHELLO

Naked in bed,Iago,and not mean harm!

It is hypocrisyagainst the devil:

They that mean virtuously,and yet do so,

The devil their virtue tempts, and they tempt heaven.

IAGO

So they do nothing,’tis a venialslip:

But if I give my wife a handkerchief,——

OTHELLO

What then?

IAGO

Why,then,’tis hers,my lord;and,being hers,

She may,I think,bestow’ton any man.

OTHELLO

She is protectressof her honour too:

May she give that?

IAGO

Her honour is an essencethat’s not seen;

They have it very oft that have it not:

But,for the handkerchief,——

OTHELLO

By heaven,I would most gladly have forgot it.

Thou said’st,it comes o’ermy memory,

As doth the raveno’er the infectedhouse,

Bodingto all——he had my handkerchief.

IAGO

Ay,what of that?

OTHELLO

That’s not so good now.

IAGO

What,

If I had said I had seen him do you wrong?

Or heard him say,——as knaves be such abroad,

Who having,by their own importunatesuit,

Or voluntarydotageof some mistress,

Convincedor supplied them,cannot choose

But they must blab——

OTHELLO

Hath he said any thing?

IAGO

He hath,my lord;but be you well assured,

No more than he’ll unswear.

OTHELLO

What hath he said?

IAGO

‘Faith,that he did——I know not what he did

OTHELLO

What?what?

IAGO

Lie——

OTHELLO

With her?

IAGO

With her,on her;what you will.

OTHELLO

Lie with her!lie on her!We say lie on her,when

they belieher. Lie with her!that’s fulsome.

——Handkerchief——confessions——handkerchief!——To

confess,and be hanged for his labour;——first,to be

hanged,and then to confess.——I trembleat it.

Nature would not investherself in such shadowing

passion without some instruction.It is words

that shake me thus.Pish !Noses,ears,and lips.

—Is’t possible?—Confess—handkerchief!—O devil!—

[Falls in a trance.]

IAGO

Work on,My medicine,work!Thus credulousfools are

caught;

And many worthy and chastedameseven thus,

All guiltless,meet reproach.What,ho!my lord!

My lord,I say!Othello!

[Enter CASSIO]

How now,Cassio!

CASSIO

What’s the matter?

IAGO

My lord is fall’n into an epilepsy:

This is his second fit;he had one yesterday.

CASSIO

Rubhim about the temples.

IAGO

No,forbear;

The lethargymust have his quiet course:

If not, he foams at mouth and by and by

Breaks out to savage madness. Look he stirs:

Do you withdraw yourself a little while,

He will recover straight:when he is gone,

I would on great occasionspeak with you.

[Exit CASSIO]

How is it,general?have you not hurt your head?

OTHELLO

Dost thou mockme?

IAGO

I mock you!no,by heaven.

Would you would bear your fortune like a man!

OTHELLO

A hornedman’s a monster and a best.

IAGO

There’s many a beast then in a populouscity,

And many a civilmonster.

OTHELLO

Did he confess it?

IAGO

Good sir,be a man;

Think every bearded fellow that’s but yoked

May draw with you:there’s millions now alive

That nightly lie in those unproperbeds

Which they dare swear peculiar:your case is better.

O,’tis the spiteof hell,the fiend’s arch-mock,

To lip a wanton in a securecouch ,

And to suppose her chaste!No,let me know;

And knowing what I am,I know what she shall be.

OTHELLO

O,thou art wise;’tis certain.

IAGO

Stand you awhile apart;

Confine yourself but in a patient list.

Whilst you were here o’erwhelmedwith your grief——

A passion most unsuiting such a man——

Cassio came hither:I shifted him away,

And laid good’scuseupon your ecstasy,

Bade him anonreturn and here speak with me;

The which he promised.Do but encaveyourself,

And mark the fleers,the gibes ,and notable scorns’,

That dwell in every region’of his face;

For I will make him tell the tale anew⒀,

Where,how,how oft,how long ago, and when

He hath,and is again to cope your wife:

I say,but mark his gesture.Marry,patience;

Or I shall say you are all in allin spleen,

And nothing of a man.

OTHELLO

Dost thou hear,Iago?

I will be found most cunningin my patience;

But——dost thou hear?——most bloody.

IAGO

That’s not amiss;

But yet keep time in all.Will you withdraw?

[OTHELLO retires]

Now will I question Cassio of Bianca,

A housewife that by selling her desires

Buys herself bread and clothes:it is a creature

That doteson Cassio;as ’tis the strumpet’splague

To beguilemany and be beguiled by one:

He,when he hears of her,cannot refrain

From the excessof laughter.Here he comes:

[Re-enter CASSIO]

As he shall smile,Othello shall go mad;

And his unbookishjealousy must construe

Poor Cassio’s smiles,gestures and light behavior,

Quite in the wrong.How do you now,lieutenant?

CASSIO

The worser that you give me the addition

Whose want even kills me.

IAGO

Ply’ Desdemona well,and you are sure on’t.

[Speaking lower]

Now,if this suit lay in Bianco’s power,

How quickly should you speed!

CASSIO

Alas,poor caitiff!

OTHELLO

look,how he laughs already!

IAGO

I never knew woman love man so.

CASSIO

Alas,poor rogue!I think,i’faith,she loves me.

OTHELLO

Now he deniesit faintly,and laughs it out.

IAGO

Do you hear,Cassio?

OTHELLO

Now he importunes him

To tell it o’er:go to;well said,well said.

IAGO

She gives it outthat you shall marry hey:

Do you intend it?

CASSIO

Ha,ha,ha!

OTHELLO

Do you triumph,Roman?do you triumph?

CASSIO

I marry her!what?a customer!Prithee,bear some

charityto my wit:do not think it so unwholesome.

Ha,ha,ha!

OTHELLO

So,so,so,so:they laugh that win.

IAGO

‘Faith,the cry goes thatyou shall marry her.

CASSIO

Prithee,say true.

IAGO

I am a very villain else.

OTHELLO

Have you scoredme?Well.

CASSIO

This is the monkey’s own giving out:she is

persuaded I will marry her, out of her own love and

flattery,not out of my promise.

OTHELLO

Iago beckonsme;now he begins the story.

CASSIO

She was here even now;she hauntsme in every place.

I was the other daytalking on the sea-bank with

certain Venetians;and thithercomes the bauble,

and,by this hand,she falls me thus about my neck——

OTHELLO

Crying’O dear Cassio!’as it were:his gesture

imports it.

CASSIO

So hangs,and lolls,and weeps upon me;so hales,

and pulls me:ha,ha,ha!

OTHELLO

Now he tells how she pluckedhim to my chamber.O,

I see that nose of yours, but not that dog I shall

throw it to.

CASSIO

Well,I must leave her company.

IAGO

Before me!look,where she comes.

CASSIO

‘Tis such another fitchew !marry a perfumedone.

[Enter BIANCA]

What do you mean by this haunting of me?

BIANCA

Let the devil and his dam haunt you!What did you

mean by that same handkerchief you gave me even now?

I was a fine fool to take it. I must take out the

work?——A likely piece of work,that you should find

it in your chamber, and not know who left it there!

This is some minx’stoken,and I must take out the

work?There;give it your hobby-horse:where so ever

you had it,I’ll take out no work on’t.

CASSIO

How now,my sweet Bianca!how now!how now!

OTHELLO

By heaven,that should be my handkerchief!

BIANCA

An you’ll come to supper to-night,you may;an you

will not,come you are next prepared for.[Exit.]

IAGO

After her,after her.

CASSIO

‘Faith,I must;she’ll railin the street else.

IAGO

Will you supthere?

CASSIO

‘Faith,I intend so.

IAGO

Well,I may chance to see you;for I would very fain

speak with you.

CASSIO

Prithee,come;will you?

IAGO

Go to;say no more.

[Exit CASSIO]

OTHELLO

[Advancing]How shall I murderhim,Iago?

IAGO

Did you perceivehow he laughed at his vice?

OTHELLO

O Iago!

IAGO

And did you see the handkerchief?

OTHELLO

Was that mine?

IAGO

Yours by this hand:and to see how he prizes the

foolish woman your wife!she gave it him, and he

hath given it his whore.

OTHELLO

I would have him nine years a-killing.

A fine woman!a fair woman!a sweet woman!

IAGO

Nay,you must forget that.

OTHELLO

Ay,let her rot,and perish,and be damned to-night;

for she shall not live:no,my heart is turned to

stone;I strike it,and it hurts my hand.O,the

world hath not a sweeter creature:she might lie by

an emperor’s side and command him tasks.

IAGO

Nay,that’s not your way.

OTHELLO

Hang her!Ido but say what she is:so delicate

with her needle:an admirablemusician:O!she

will sing the savageness out of a bear:of so high

and plenteouswit and invention:——

IAGO

She’s the worse for all this.

OTHELLO

O,a thousand thousand times:and then,of so

gentle a condition!

IAGO

Ay,too gentle.

OTHELLO

Nay,that’s certain:but yet the pity of it,lago!

O Iago,the pity of it,Iago!

IAGO

If you are so fond over her iniquity,give her

patentto offend;for,if it touch not you,it comes

near nobody.

OTHELLO

I will chop her into messes:cuckold me!

IAGO

O,’tis foulin her.

OTHELLO

With mine officer!

IAGO

That’s fouler.

OTHELLO

Get me some poison,Iago;this night:I’ll not

expostulatewith her,lesther body and beauty

unprovidemy mind again:this night,Iago.

IAGO

Do it not with poison,strangleher in her bed,even

the bed she hath contaminated.

OTHELLO

Good,good:the justice of it pleases:very good.

IAGO

And for Cassio,let me be his undertaker:you

shall hear more by midnight.

OTHELLO

Excellent good.

[A trumpetwithin]

What trumpet is that same?

IAGO

Something from Venice,sure.’Tis Lodovico

Come from the duke:and,see,your wife is with him.

[Enter LODOVICO,DESDEMONA,and Attendants]

LODOVICO

Save you,worthygeneral!

OTHELLO

With all my heart,sir.

LODOVICO

The duke and senatorsof Venice greet you.

[Gives him a letter]

OTHELLO

I kiss the instrument of their pleasures

[Opens the letter,and reads]

DESDEMONA

And what’s the news,good cousinLodovico?

IAGO

I am very glad to see you,signio

Welcome to Cyprus.

LODOVICO

I thank you.How does Lieutenant Cassio?

IAGO

Lives,sir.

DESDEMONA

Cousin,there’s fall’nbetween him and my lord

An unkind breach:but you shall make all well.

OTHELLO

Are you sure of that?

DESDEMONA

My lord?

OTHELLO[Reads]

‘This fail you not to do,as you will——’

LODOVICO

He did not call;he’s busy in the paper.

Is there division’twixtmy lord and Cassio?

DESDEMONA

A most unhappy one:I would do much

To atonethem,for the love I bear to Cassio.

OTHELLO

Fire and brimstone!

DESDEMONA

My lord?

OTHELLO

Are you wise?

DESDEMONA

What,is he angry?

LODOVICO

May be the letter moved him;

For,as I think,they do command him home,

Deputing.Cassio in his government

DESDEMONA

Trust me,I am glad on’t.

OTHELLO

Indeed!

DESDEMONA

My lord?

OTHELLO

I am glad to see you mad.

DESDEMONA

Why,sweet Othello,——

OTHELLO

[Striking her]Devil!

DESDEMONA

I have not deserved this.

LODOVICO

My lord,this would not be believed in Venice,

Though I should swearI saw’t:’Tis very much:

Make her amends;she weeps.

OTHELLO

O devil,devil!

If that the earth could teemwith woman’s tears,

Each drop she falls would prove a crocodileOut of my sight!

DESDEMONA

I will not stay to offend you.

[Going]

LODOVICO

Truly,an obedientlady:

I do beseech your lordship,call her back.

OTHELLO

Mistress!

DESDEMONA

My lord?

OTHELLO

What would you with her,sir?

LODOVICO

Who,I,my lord?

OTHELLO

Ay;you did wish that I would make her turn:

Sir,she can turn,and turn,and yet go on,

And turn again;and she can weep,sir,weep;

And she’s obedient,as you say,obedient,

Very obedient.Proceed you in your tears.

Concerning this,sir,——O well-painted passion!——

I am commanded home.Get you away;

I’ll send foryou anonSir,I obey the mandate,

And will return to Venice.Hence,avaunt!

[Exit DESDEMONA]

Cassio shall have my place.And,sir,tonight,

I do entreatthat we may sup together:

You are welcome,sir,to Cyprus.——Goats and monkeys!

[Exit]

LODOVICO

Is this the noble Moor whom our full senate.

Call all in allsufficient?Is this the nature

Whom passion could not shake?whose solid virtue

The shot of accident,nor dartof chance,

Could neither grazenor pierce?

IAGO

He is much changed.

LODOVICO

Are his wits safe?is he not lightof brain?

IAGO

He’s that he is :I may not breathe my censure

What he might be:if what he might he is not,

I would to heaven he were !

LODOVICO

What,strike his wife!

IAGO

‘Faith,that was not so well;yet would I knewThat stroke would prove the worst!

LODOVICO

IS it his use?

Or did the letter work upon his blood,

And new-create this fault?

IAGO

Alas,alas!

It is not honesty in me to speak

What I have seen and known.You shall observe him,

And his own courses will denote him so

That I may save my speech:do but go after,

And mark how he continues.

LODOVICO

I am sorry that I am deceived in him.

[Exeunt]