Iago is
the smartest villain among all the villains. Though Iago is mostly responsible
for the tragic happenings in the lives of most of the leading characters in
Othello, he proves himself as an ambidextrous manipulator. As a villain
Iago has almost supernatural ability to manipulate the other characters
of the play. He manipulates the other characters into following their own
agendas and all the while coming closer to his goal of bringing Othello to his
downfall.
The
villainy of Iago is great in the sense that he had an elaborate plan, using
every character in the story and manipulating their minds to the point where
everyone was believing lies. He did all of this so that he could get what he
wanted-the destruction of Othello. Through Iago’s subtle manipulation each
event moves along the plot and has a direct effect on the emotional responses
of the characters. The decisions that are made prepare the dramatic conditions
for the next tragic event. Right from the beginning of the play, Iago’s
involvement in the play is evident.
The play
begins with a conversation between Iago and Roderigo. From their conversation
it appears that Iago has been overlooked by Othello for a promotion. This makes
him vengeful and his first action is to tell Brabantio that Othello has eloped
with his daughter, Desdemona. Iago’s behaviour and method of disclosure
is designed to deliberately alarm Brabantio and give him a dreadful shock. Iago
wants to poison Brabantio’s mind against Othello. Here Iago appears as a
racist. Iago uses racism as a spark to inflame
Desdemona’s father, Senator Brabantio, against Othello..After Iago and Roderigo
raise a clamor outside Brabantio’s house late one evening, the senator awakens
and comes to a window. Iago then uses vulgar animal imagery to slur Othello,
telling Brabantio that the black Moor has seized his greatest treasure, his
daughter, and at that very moment is defiling her.
Iago
shouts to Brabantio
... now, very now, an old black ram
Is tupping5 your white ewe6. Arise, arise!
Is tupping5 your white ewe6. Arise, arise!
There is
an obvious racism in this quote. When Brabantio
reacts with incredulity, Iago replies with a metaphor that this time compares
Othello to a horse: ‘you’ll have your daughter
covered with a Barbary horse.’
But here
Iago fails to achieve his end namely the fall of Othello. The court declares
Othello innocent and consents to the marriage between Othello and Desdemona.
But Iago is not the man to give up. Iago follows Othello like a shadow. And it
is Iago who plants the seeds of
suspicion and jealousy in Othello’s mind and brings down the ultimate tragedy
in the play.
Iago
goes to Cyprus and his next concern at Cyprus is to bring Cassio into disrepute
which he proposes to effect by making Cassio drunk. Iago gives to Montano the
impression that Cassio is a habitual drunkard and therefore unfit to be
Othello’s lieutenant. Asked if Cassio often gets drunk, Iago replies that
Cassio cannot sleep without heavy drinking. He here tells a brazen lie but in
such a possible manner that Montano, he prepares that man to fight with Cassio,
just as he has already prepared Roderigo, also by telling him lies, to
provoke Cassio into a quarrel. After having suggested to Cassio to seek
Desdemona’s help, Iago sets forth his strategy in a soliloquy. He will draw the
Moor apart for a while and then bring him precisely when he can see Cassio
“soliciting” Desdemona at a distance.
Iago has
an amazing genius for plotting and for manipulation. Apart from the credulity
of his victims, he succeeds because of his fertility of mind in inventing lies
and falsehoods and in lending plausibility to whatever he says or invents. He
drives Othello desperate and almost mad with jealousy. Iago’s whole manner of
talking to Othello in the great “temptation scene” is so plausible, so
persuasive, and so skillful that Othello easily falls into the trap. The Act
3,Scene 3; often called the "temptation scene," is the most important
scene in the entire play and one
of the most well-known scenes in all drama. In it, Iago speaks carefully and at
length with Othello and plants the seeds of suspicion and jealousy which
eventually bring about the tragic events of the play.
Iago
arranges to be walking with Othello when they just "happen" to see
Desdemona and Cassio talking quietly. Iago causes Othello to see the
infidelity of his young and beautiful wife, Desdemona, with his favorite
lieutenant, Michael Cassio. Indeed, Othello does not see the gap between
appearance and reality. His "Ha! I like not
that!" (35) is a blatant lie; this fraudulent tsk-tsking hides Iago's true
delight; nothing could satisfy his perversity more. But because Othello sees
nothing amiss, Iago must make a show of not wanting to speak of it, or of
Cassio, while all the time insinuating that Cassio was not just leaving, but
that he was "steal[ing] away so guilty-like" (39). Iago's words here
are filled with forceful innuendo, and as he pretends to be a man who cannot
believe what he sees, he reintroduces jealousy into Othello's subconscious.
Iago
makes suggestive comments to Othello about Cassio's way with the women and his
relationship with Desdemona. When Iago is alone with
Othello, he resumes his attack on his general's soul. Out of seemingly idle
curiosity, he asks if Desdemona was correct when she referred to the days when
Othello was courting her; did Cassio indeed "know of your love?"
(95). Here he prods Othello's memory to recall that Desdemona and Cassio have
known each other for some time. Then again playing the reluctant confidant, he
begs, as it were, not to be pressed about certain of his dark thoughts. One can
see how skillfully Iago makes use of his public reputation for honesty.
Iago is
a misogynist, who warns Othello to watch his wife closely (so that he will
notice all the ways in which Iago plans to frame Desdemona and Cassio). He reminds Othello that Desdemona is a Venetian lady and
"in Venice they [wives] do not let [even God] see the pranks / They dare
not show their husbands" (202–203). In other words, the faithless wife is
a well-known member of Venetian society. Iago
also attempts to frame Emilia as a duplicitous woman, indeed all women, as one
who would "rise to play and go to bed to work"(113).
In
achieving his goal namely the fall of Othello, Iago employs various devices. He
later drops Desdemona’s handkerchief in Cassio’s apartment and then tells
Othello that he saw Cassio wiping his beard with it. He invents a dream in
which Cassio is supposed to have made love to Desdemona and to have cursed the
Moor. He questions Cassio about Bianca and makes Othello believe that he is
talking to Cassio about Desdemona. And he arranges matter in such a way that
Cassio should not meet Othello face to face because a meeting between them is
likely to lead to an exposure of Iago’s falsehoods. His designs against Cassio
and Roderigo are also well-executed. His last move against Cassio and Roderigo
is one of the masterpieces of his devilry, though unhappily for him, it
miscarries. Here he literally wanted to kill two birds with one stone.
Besides he remains perfectly cool and composed throughout. Except once and then
also for a few moments, he does not lose his nerve at any stage throughout the
play. In having brought about the destruction of Othello and Desdemona he does
not feel the least regret or remorse. He is a totally unrepentant evil-doer.
His cruelty is remarkable. He feels not the least pity for the innocent and
trustful Desdemona; nor does he shrink from stabbing to death his own wife or
Roderigo.
No doubt Iago is the
most contemptuous character in the play Othello. But as a character he has some
remarkable qualities. Iago possesses a vast knowledge of human nature and human
dealings; otherwise he could not have been such an effective schemer and
manipulator. He gives us, in the course of play, several generalizations which,
if read apart from the context, would seem to be unquestionable truths. His
remarks about how promotions are granted on the basis of the personal
preferences of the employer, his comments on virtue and on reputation, his
references to false appearances which people put on and to the foul thoughts
which enter even the noblest minds-all these carry conviction.
If one
looks in modern day cinema, one will see the trite villain, evil to the core.
Shakespeare took his villains to a higher level. He did not make them transparent
like the villains of modern cinema. He gave his villains depth and spirit. Iago
is a perfect example of "Shakespeare's villain." His amorality and
cynicism give, what would be a very dull character, life. the villainy of Iago
did cause a lot of despair and cost many characters their lives in Othello.