Suggests that their relationship was purely
animalistic. Link to race. Link to white being
the colour of innocence -> Othello has tainted
Desdemona with his evil ways
'Ere I would say I would drown myself for
the love of a guinea-hen, I would change
my humanity with a baboon'
Annotations:
Act 1, Scene 3
Iago would rather be a baboon than kill
himself out of lust for a woman that he
cannot have. This is indirectly aimed at
Roderigo because he lusts after
Desdemona but he cannot be with her
because she is with Othello. Also, a
baboon is not a well-appreciated animal
and can be seen as quite stupid,
reflecting the extent of Iago's beliefs
because he would rather become so
under-appreciated and unloved than kill
himself
'drown cats and blind puppies'
Annotations:
Act 1, Scene 3
Telling Roderigo that drowning
is only for cats and blind
puppies suggests that he is
trying to say that Roderigo is
not manly because he is willing
to commit to a form of torture
that Iago believes should be
reserved for animals
CASSIO
(when drunk) 'by and by a fool,
and presently a beast!'
Annotations:
Act 2, Scene 3
Suggests that he becomes a 'beast' when he is drunk which
explains him hitting Roderigo. This links to animals being savage
OTHELLO
'Exchange me for a goat, when I shall turn the business of
my soul to such exsufflicate and blowed surmises'
Annotations:
Act 3, Scene 3
I might as well become a goat if I ever become as jealous as you're
saying I will become. This is ironic because Othello's jealousy is
ultimately what kills him and the jealousy becomes a vicious circle
in which he ends up killing Desdemona despite the fact that she
was innocent
'A horned man's a monster and a beast'
Annotations:
Act 4, Scene 1
This describes how he is feeling; strange and non-human
EMILIA
'play the swan and die in music'
Annotations:
Act 5, Scene 2
The swan has connotations of innocence due to its
colour, suggesting that Emilia died an innocent
woman. However, it can be argued whether Emilia
was an innocent woman or not because she aided
Iago in gaining the handkerchief behind Othello
and Desdemona's backs
Like the repeated references to plants, these references to
animals convey a sense that the laws of nature, rather than
those of society, are the primary forces governing the characters
in this play
When used in reference to Othello, animalistic language reflects
racism, not just of the characters but of the audience. Even
without seeing Othello, a Shakespearean audience would
imagine a savage 'Moor' almost instantaneously after Iago said
'Barbary horse'