<p>[A council-chamber. The DUKE and Senators sitting at a table;Officers attending]</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>There is no composition in these news</p>
<p>That gives them credit.</p>
<p>First Senator</p>
<p>Indeed, they are disproportion’d;</p>
<p>My letterssay a hundred andsevengalleys.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>And mine,a hundred and forty</p>
<p>Second Senator</p>
<p>And mine,two hundred:</p>
<p>Butthoughtheyjump noton a just account,——</p>
<p>Asinthese,wheretheaimreports,</p>
<p>‘Tis oft withdifference——yet do they all confirm</p>
<p>A Turkish fleet, and bearing up to Cyprus.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Nay, itispossibleenough to judgment:</p>
<p>I do not so secureme in theerror,</p>
<p>But themain article Ido approve</p>
<p>In fearful sense.</p>
<p>Sailor[Within]</p>
<p>What, ho! what, ho! what, ho!</p>
<p>First Officer</p>
<p>Amessenger from the galleys.</p>
<p>[Enter a Sailor]</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Now, what’s the business?</p>
<p>Sailor</p>
<p>The Turkish preparation makes for Rhodes;</p>
<p>So wasI bid report here to the state</p>
<p>By Signior Angelo.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>How say you by this change?</p>
<p>First Senator</p>
<p>This cannot be,</p>
<p>By no assay of reason:’tis a pageant,</p>
<p>To keepus in false gaze.When we consider</p>
<p>The importaney of Cyprus to the Turk,</p>
<p>And let ourselves again but understand,</p>
<p>That as it more concerns the Turk than Rhodes,</p>
<p>So may he with more facile question bear it,</p>
<p>For that it stands not insuch warlike brace,</p>
<p>But altogether lacks the abilities</p>
<p>That Rhodes is dress’d in:if we make thought of this,</p>
<p>We mustnot think the Turk is so unskilful</p>
<p>To leave that latest which concerns him first,</p>
<p>Neglecting an attempt ofeaseand gain,</p>
<p>To wake and wage a danger profitless.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Nay,in all confidence,he’s not for Rhodes.</p>
<p>First Officer</p>
<p>Here is more news.</p>
<p>[Enter a Messenger]</p>
<p>Messenger</p>
<p>The Ottomites, reverend and gracious,</p>
<p>Steering with due course towards the isleof Rhodes,</p>
<p>Have there injointedthem with an after fleel.</p>
<p>First Senator</p>
<p>Ay,so Ithought. How many, as you guess?</p>
<p>Messenger</p>
<p>Of thirty sail: and now they do restem</p>
<p>Their backward course, bearing with frankappearance</p>
<p>Their purposes toward Cyprus. Signior Montano,</p>
<p>Your trustyandmostvaliantservitor,</p>
<p>With his free dutyrecommendsyou thus,</p>
<p>And prays youto believehim.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>‘Tis certain, then, for Cyprus.</p>
<p>Marcus Luccicos, is not he in town?</p>
<p>First Senator</p>
<p>He’s now inFlorence.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Write from us to him; post-post-haste dispatch.</p>
<p>First Senator</p>
<p>Here comes Brabantio and the valiant Moor.</p>
<p>[Enter BRABANTIO, OTHELLO, IAGO, RODERIGO, andOfficers]</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Valiant Othello,we must straight employ you</p>
<p>Against the general enemy Ottoman.</p>
<p>[To BRABANTIO]</p>
<p>I did not see you; welcome, gentle signior;</p>
<p>We lack’d your counsel and yourhelp tonight</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>So didI yours. Good your grace,pardon me;</p>
<p>Neither my place nor aughtI heard of business</p>
<p>Hath raised mefrommybed, nordoth the general care</p>
<p>Take hold on me, for my particular grief</p>
<p>Is of so flood-gate and o’erbearing nature</p>
<p>That it engluts and swallows other sorrows</p>
<p>And it is still itself</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Why, what’s the matter?</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>My daughter!O, mydaughter!</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Senator Dead?</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>Ay,tome;</p>
<p>She is abused, stol’n from me, and corrupted</p>
<p>By spellsand medicines bought of mountebanks;</p>
<p>For nature so preposterouslyto err,</p>
<p>Being not deficient, blind, or lame of sense,</p>
<p>Sanswitchcraftcouldnot.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Whoe’er he be that inthis foul proceeding</p>
<p>Haththus beguiledyour daughter of herself</p>
<p>And you of her, the bloodybook of law</p>
<p>You shall yourself read in the bitter letter</p>
<p>After your own sense, yea, though our proper son</p>
<p>Stood in your action</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>HumblyI thank your grace</p>
<p>Here is the man, this Moor, whom now, it seems,</p>
<p>Your special mandatefor the state-affairs</p>
<p>Hath hitherbrought</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Senator We are very sorry for’t.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>[To OTHELLO] What, in yourownpart, can yousay tothis?</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>Nothing, butthis is so.</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>Most potent,grave, and reverend signiors,</p>
<p>My verynobleand approved good masters,</p>
<p>That I haveta’enawaythisoldman’sdaughter,</p>
<p>It is most true; true, Ihave married her:</p>
<p>The very head and front of my offending</p>
<p>Hath this extent,no more Rude amI in my speech,</p>
<p>And little bless’d with thesoft phrase of peace:</p>
<p>For since these armsofmine had sevenyears’pith,</p>
<p>Till now some nine moons wasted,they have used</p>
<p>Their dearest action in the tented field,</p>
<p>And little of this great world canI speak,</p>
<p>More than pertains to feats of broil and battle,</p>
<p>And therefore little shallIgrace my cause</p>
<p>In speaking for myself.Yet,byyour gracious patience,</p>
<p>I willaroundunvarnish’dtaledeliver</p>
<p>Of my whole course of love; what drugs, what charms,</p>
<p>What conjuration and what mightymagic,</p>
<p>For such proceedingIam charged withal, Iwonhis daughter.</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>Amaiden never bold;</p>
<p>Of spirit so still and quiet, that her motion</p>
<p>Blush’d at herself;and she, in spite of nature,</p>
<p>Of years, of country, credit, every thing,</p>
<p>To fallinlove with what she fear’d to look on!</p>
<p>It is a judgment maim’d andmostimperfect</p>
<p>That will confess perfection so could err</p>
<p>Against all rules of nature,and must be driven</p>
<p>To find outpractisesofcunninghell,</p>
<p>Why this should be. Itherefore vouch again</p>
<p>That withsomemixturespowerful o’erthe blood,</p>
<p>Or with some dram conjured to this effect,</p>
<p>He wrought upon her.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Tov ouchthis,isnoproof,</p>
<p>Without more wider and more overttest</p>
<p>Than these thin habits and poor likelihoods,</p>
<p>Of modern seemingdo prefer against him.</p>
<p>First Senator</p>
<p>But,Othello,speak:</p>
<p>Did you by indirect and forced courses</p>
<p>Subdue and poison this young maid’s affections?</p>
<p>Or came it by requestand suchfairquestion</p>
<p>As soul tosoulaffordeth?</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>I do beseeh you,</p>
<p>Send for the lady to the Sagittary,</p>
<p>And let her speak of me before her father:</p>
<p>If you do find me foul in her report,</p>
<p>The trust,theofficeIdohold of you,</p>
<p>Not only take away, but let your sentence</p>
<p>Even fall uponmy life.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Fetch Desdemona hither.</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>Ancient,conduct them:you best know the place.</p>
<p>[Exeunt IAGO and Attendants]</p>
<p>And, till she come, as truly as to heaven</p>
<p>I do confessthe vices of my blood,</p>
<p>So justly to your grave earsI’ll present</p>
<p>How I did thrivein this fair lady’s love,</p>
<p>And she in mine.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Say it, Othello.</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>Her father loved me;oftinvited me;</p>
<p>Still question’d me the story of my life,</p>
<p>From yearto year, the battles, sieges, fortunes,</p>
<p>ThatI have passed.</p>
<p>I ran itthrough,evenfrommyboyishdays,</p>
<p>To thevery moment that he bademd tell it;</p>
<p>WhereinI spake of most disastrous chances,</p>
<p>Of moving accidents by flood and field</p>
<p>Of hair-breadth scapesi’ the imminent deadly breach,</p>
<p>Of being taken by the insolent foe</p>
<p>And sold to slavery, of my redemption thence</p>
<p>And portancein my travels’ history:</p>
<p>Wherein of antresvastand desertsidle,</p>
<p>Rough quarries,rocks and hills whose heads touch heaven</p>
<p>It was my hint to speak,——such was the process;</p>
<p>And of the Cannibalsthat each other eat,</p>
<p>The Anthropophagiand men whose heads</p>
<p>Do grow beneath their shoulders.This to hear</p>
<p>Would Desdemona seriously incline:</p>
<p>But still the house-affairs would draw her thence:</p>
<p>Which ever as she could with hastedispatch,</p>
<p>She’ld come again,and with a greedy ear</p>
<p>Devourup my discourse:which I observing,</p>
<p>Took once a plianthour,and found good means</p>
<p>To draw from her a prayer of earnest heart</p>
<p>That I would all my pilgrimagedilate,</p>
<p>Whereof by parcelsshe had something heard,</p>
<p>But not intentively:I did consent,</p>
<p>And often did beguile her of her tears,</p>
<p>When I did speak of some distressfulstroke.</p>
<p>That my youth suffer’d My story being done,</p>
<p>She gave me for my pains a world of sighs:</p>
<p>She swore,in faith,twas strange,’twas passing strange,</p>
<p>‘Twas pitiful,’twas wondrouspitiful:</p>
<p>She wish’d she had not heard it,yet she wish’d</p>
<p>That heaven had made her such a man:she thank’d me,</p>
<p>And bade me,if I had a friend that loved her,</p>
<p>I should but teach him how to tell my story.</p>
<p>And that would wooher.Upon this hintI spake:</p>
<p>She loved me for the dangers I had pass’d,</p>
<p>And I loved her that she did pity them.</p>
<p>This only is the witchcraft I have used:</p>
<p>Here comes the lady;let her witness it.</p>
<p>[Enter DESDEMONA,IAGO,and Attendants]</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>I think this tale would win my daughter too.</p>
<p>Good Brabantio,</p>
<p>Take up this mangledmatter at the best:</p>
<p>Men do their broken weapons rather use.</p>
<p>Than their bare hands.</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>I pray you,hear her speak:</p>
<p>If she confessthat she was half the wooer,</p>
<p>Destruction on my head,if my bad blame</p>
<p>Light on the man!Come hither,gentle mistress:</p>
<p>Do you perceivein all this noble company</p>
<p>Where most you owe obedience?</p>
<p>DESDEMONA</p>
<p>My noble father,</p>
<p>I do perceive here a divided duty:</p>
<p>To you I am bound for life and education;</p>
<p>My life and education both do learn me</p>
<p>How to respect you;you are the lord of duty;</p>
<p>I am hithertoyour daughter:but here’s my husband,</p>
<p>And so much duty as my mother show’d</p>
<p>To you,preferring you before her father,</p>
<p>So much I challenge that I may profess</p>
<p>Due to the Moor my lord.</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>God be wi’you!I have done.</p>
<p>Please it your grace,on to the state-affairs:</p>
<p>I had rather to adopta child than get it.</p>
<p>Come hither,Moor:</p>
<p>I here do give thee that with all my heart</p>
<p>Which,but thou hast already,with all my heart</p>
<p>I would keep from thee.For your sake,jewel,</p>
<p>I am glad at soul I have no other child:</p>
<p>For thy escape would teach me tyranny,</p>
<p>To hang clogson them.I have done,my lord.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Let me speak like yourself,and lay a sentence,</p>
<p>Which,as a grise or step,may help there lovers</p>
<p>Into your favour.</p>
<p>When remediesare past,the griefsare ended</p>
<p>By seeing the worst,which late on hopes depended.</p>
<p>To mourna mischiefthat is past and gone</p>
<p>Is the next way to draw new mischief on.</p>
<p>What cannot be preservedwhen fortune takesPatience her</p>
<p>injury a mockerymakes.</p>
<p>The robb’d that smiles steals something from the thief;</p>
<p>He robs himself that spends a bootlessgrief.</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>So let the Turk of Cyprus us beguile;</p>
<p>We lose it not,so long as we can smile.</p>
<p>He bears the sentence well that nothing bears</p>
<p>But the free comfort which from thence he hears,</p>
<p>But he bears both the sentence and the sorrow</p>
<p>That,to pay grief,must of poor patience borrow.</p>
<p>These sentences,to sugar,or to gall,</p>
<p>Being strong on both sides,are equivocal:</p>
<p>But words are words;I never yet did hear</p>
<p>That the bruisedheart was piercedthrough the ear.</p>
<p>I humbly beseech you,proceed to the affairs of state.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>The Turk with a most mighty preparation makes for</p>
<p>Cyprus.Othello,the fortitudeof the place is best</p>
<p>known to you;and though we have there a subtitute</p>
<p>of most allowed sufficiency,yet opinion,a</p>
<p>sovereignmistress of effects,throws a more safer</p>
<p>voice on you:you must therefor be content to-</p>
<p>slubberthe glossof your new fortunes with this</p>
<p>more stubbornand boisterousexpedition.</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>The tyrantcustom,most grave senators,</p>
<p>Hath made the flinty and steel couchof war</p>
<p>My thrice-driven bed of down:I do agnise</p>
<p>A natural and promptalacrity</p>
<p>I find in hardness,and do undertake</p>
<p>These present wars against the Ottomites.</p>
<p>Most humbly therefore bending to your state,</p>
<p>I cravefit dispositionfor my wife.</p>
<p>Due reference of place and exhibition,</p>
<p>With such accommodationand besort</p>
<p>As levels with her breeding.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>If you please ,Be’t at her father’s.</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>I’ll not have it so.</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>Nor I.</p>
<p>DESDEMONA</p>
<p>Nor I;I would not there reside,</p>
<p>To put my father in impatient thoughts</p>
<p>By being in his eye.Most gracious duke,</p>
<p>To my unfoldinglend your prosperousear;</p>
<p>And let me find a charterin your voice,</p>
<p>To assist my simpleness.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>What would You,Desdemona?</p>
<p>DESDEMONA</p>
<p>That I did love the Moor to live with him,</p>
<p>My downrightviolence and storm of fortunes</p>
<p>May trumpetto the world:my heart’s subdued</p>
<p>Even to the very quality of my lord:</p>
<p>I saw Othello’s visagein his mind,</p>
<p>And to his honour and his valiant parts</p>
<p>Did I my soul and fortunes consecrate.</p>
<p>So that,dear lords,if I be left behind,</p>
<p>A mothof peace,and he go to the war,</p>
<p>The ritesfor which I love him are bereftme,</p>
<p>And I a heavy interimshall support</p>
<p>By his dear absence.Let me go with him.</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>Let her have your voices.</p>
<p>Vouch with me,heaven,I therefore beg it not,</p>
<p>To please the palateof my appetite,</p>
<p>Nor to complywith heat——the young affects</p>
<p>In me defunct ——and proper satisfaction.</p>
<p>But to be free and bounteousto her mind:</p>
<p>And heaven defend your good souls,that you think</p>
<p>I will your serious and great business scant</p>
<p>For she is with me:no,when light-wing’d toys</p>
<p>Of feather’d Cupid seal with wanton dullness</p>
<p>My speculative and officed instruments,</p>
<p>That my disportscorrupt and taintmy business,</p>
<p>Let housewives make a skilletof my helm,</p>
<p>And all indignand base adversities</p>
<p>Make head against my estimation!</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Be it as you shall privatelydetermine,</p>
<p>Either for her stay or going:the affair cries haste,</p>
<p>And speed must answer it .</p>
<p>First Senator</p>
<p>You must away to-night.</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>With all my heart.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>At nine i’the morning here we’ll meet again.</p>
<p>Othello,leave some officer behind,</p>
<p>And he shall our commissionbring to you;</p>
<p>With such things else of quality and respect</p>
<p>As doth import you.</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>So please your grace,my ancient;</p>
<p>A man he is of honest and trust:</p>
<p>To his conveyance I assign my wife,</p>
<p>With what else needful your good grace shall think</p>
<p>To be sent after me.</p>
<p>DUKE OF VENICE</p>
<p>Let it be so.</p>
<p>Good night to every one.</p>
<p>[To BRABANTIO]</p>
<p>And,noble signior,</p>
<p>If virtue no delighted beauty lack,</p>
<p>Your son-in-law is far more fair than black.</p>
<p>First Senator</p>
<p>Adieu,brave Moor,use Desdemona well.</p>
<p>BRABANTIO</p>
<p>Look to her,Moor,if thou hast eyes to see:</p>
<p>She has deceived her father,and may thee.</p>
<p>[Exeunt DUKE OF VENICE,Senators,Officers,&c]</p>
<p>OTHELLO</p>
<p>My life upon her faith!Honest Iago,</p>
<p>My Desdemona must I leave to thee:</p>
<p>I prithee,let thy wife attendon her:</p>
<p>And bring them after in the best advantage.</p>
<p>Come,Desdemona:I have but an hour</p>
<p>Of love,of worldly mattersand direction,</p>
<p>To spend with thee:we must obey the time.</p>
<p>[Exeunt OTHELLO and DESDEMONA]</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>Iago,——</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>What say’st thou,noble heart?</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>What will I do,thinkest thou?</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>Why,go to bed,and sleep.</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>I will incontinentlydrownmyself.</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>If thou dost,I shall never love thee after.Why,</p>
<p>thou silly gentleman!</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>It is silliness to live when to live is torment;and</p>
<p>then have we a prescriptionto die when death is our</p>
<p>physician.</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>O villainous!I have looked upon the world for four</p>
<p>times seven years;and since I could distinguish</p>
<p>betwixt a benefit and an injury,I never found man</p>
<p>that knew how to love himself.Ere I would say,I</p>
<p>would drown myself for the love of a guinea-hen,I</p>
<p>would change my humanity with a baboon.</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>What should I do?I confess it is my shame to be so</p>
<p>fond;but it is not in my virtueto amendit.</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>Virtue!a fig!’tis in ourselves that we are thus or</p>
<p>thus.Our bodies are our gardens,to the which</p>
<p>our wills are gardeners:so that if we will plant</p>
<p>nettles,or sow lettuce,set hyssopand weed up</p>
<p>thyme,supply it with one genderof herbs,or</p>
<p>distract it with many,either to have it sterile</p>
<p>with idleness,or manured with industry,why,the</p>
<p>power and corrigibleauthority of this lies in our</p>
<p>wills.If the balance of our lives had not one</p>
<p>scale of reason to poise another of sensuality,the blood</p>
<p>and baseness of our natures would conduct us</p>
<p>to most presposterous conclusions:but we have</p>
<p>reason to cool our raging motions,our carnal</p>
<p>stings,our unbitted lusts,whereof I take this that</p>
<p>you call love to be a sect or scion.</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>It cannot be.</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>It is merely a lustof the blood and a permission of</p>
<p>the will.Come,be a man Drown thyself!drown</p>
<p>cats and blind puppies.I have professed me thy</p>
<p>friend and I confess me knitto thy deserving with</p>
<p>cablesof perdurable toughness;I could never</p>
<p>better steadthee than now.Put money in thy</p>
<p>purse;follow thou the wars;defeat thy favour with</p>
<p>an usurpedbeard;I say,put money in thy purse.It</p>
<p>cannot be that Desdemona should long continue her</p>
<p>love to the Moor,—put money in thy purse,—nor he</p>
<p>his to her:it was a violent commencement,and thou</p>
<p>shalt see an answerable sequestration:—put but</p>
<p>money in thy purse.These Moors are changeable in</p>
<p>their wills:fill thy purse with money:——the food</p>
<p>that to him now is as lusciousas locusts,shall be</p>
<p>to him shortly as bitter as coloquintida.She must</p>
<p>change for youth:when she is satedwith his body,</p>
<p>she will find the error of her choice:she must</p>
<p>have change,she must:therefore put money in thy</p>
<p>purse.If thou wilt needs damnthyself,do it a</p>
<p>more delicatéway than drowning.Make all the money</p>
<p>thou canst:if sanctimony and a frail vow betwixt</p>
<p>an erring barbarian and a supersubtle Venetian not</p>
<p>too hard for my wits and all the tribe of hell,thou</p>
<p>shalt enjoy her;therefore make money.A poxof</p>
<p>drowning thyself!it is clean out of the way :seek</p>
<p>thou rather to be hanged in compassingthy joy thanto</p>
<p>be drowned and go without her.</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>Wilt thou be fast to my hopes,if I depend on</p>
<p>the issue?</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>Thou art sure of me:——go,make money:——I have told</p>
<p>thee often,and I re-tell thee again and again,I</p>
<p>hate the Moor:my cause is hearted;thine hath no</p>
<p>less reason.Let us be conjunctivein our revenge</p>
<p>against him:if thou canst cuckoldhim,thou dost</p>
<p>thyself a pleasure,me a sport.</p>
<p>There are many events in the wombof time which will be</p>
<p>delivered.</p>
<p>Traverse!go,provide thy money.We will have moreof</p>
<p>this to-morrow.Adieu.</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>Where shall we meet i’the morning?</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>At my lodging.</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>I’ll be with thee betimes.</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>Go to;farewell.Do you hear,Roderigo?</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>What say you?</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>No more of drowning,do you hear?</p>
<p>RODERIGO</p>
<p>I am changed:I’ll go sell all my land</p>
<p>〔Exit.〕</p>
<p>IAGO</p>
<p>Thus do I ever make my fool my purse:</p>
<p>For I mine own gain’d knowledge should profane,</p>
<p>If I would time expend with such a snipe.</p>
<p>But for my sport and profit.I hate the Moor:</p>
<p>And it is thought abroad,that’twixt my sheets</p>
<p>He has done my office:I know not if’t be true;</p>
<p>But I,for mere suspicion in that kind,</p>
<p>Will do as if for surety.He holds me well;</p>
<p>The better shall my purpose work on him.</p>
<p>Cassio’s a proper man:let me see now:</p>
<p>To get his place and to plumeup my will</p>
<p>In double knavery——How,how?Let’s see:——</p>
<p>After some time,to abuse Othello’s ear</p>
<p>That he is too familiarwith his wife.</p>
<p>He hath a person and a smooth dispose</p>
<p>To be suspected,framedto make women false.</p>
<p>The Moor is of a free and open nature,</p>
<p>That thinks men honest that but seem to be so,</p>
<p>And will as tenderly be led by the nose</p>
<p>As asses are.</p>
<p>I have’t.It is engender’d.Hell and night</p>
<p>Must bring this monstrous birth to the world’s light.</p>
<p>[Exit]</p>