Othello (Quarto 1, 1622)
Peer Reviewed
¶
Enter Iago and Roderigo.
¶
Roderigo.
5That you Iago, who has had my purse,
¶Iag. S'blood, but you will not heare me,
If euer I did dreame of_such a matter, abhorre me.
¶Oft capt to him, and by the faith of man,
15I know my price, I am worth no worse a place.
¶But he, as louing his owne pride and purposes,
¶Horribly stuft with Epithites of warre:
18.1And in conclusion,
20I haue already chosen my officer, and what was he?
¶Forsooth, a great Arithmetition,
¶One Michael Cassio, a Florentine,
¶A fellow almost dambd in a faire wife,
25Nor the deuision of a Battell knowes,
30And I, of whom his eyes had seene the proofe,
¶At Rhodes, at Cipres, and on other grounds,
¶By Debitor and Creditor, this Counter-caster:
¶: He in good time, must his Leiutenant be,
¶Rod. By heauen I rather would haue bin his hangman.
¶Ia. But there's no remedy,
¶Preferment goes by letter and affection,
40Not by the olde gradation, where each second
¶Stood heire to the first:
Now sir be iudge your selfe,
¶to loue the Moore.
¶Rod. I would not follow him then.
¶I follow him to serue my turne vpon him,
¶Many a dutious and knee-crooking knaue,
50That doting on his owne obsequious bondage,
¶For noughe but prouender, and when hee's old cashierd,
¶Others there are, who trimd in formes,
And vissages of duty, keepe yet their hearts,
55Attending on themselues, and throwing
¶Doe well thriue by 'em,
¶And when they haue lin'd their coates,
¶Doe themselues homage,
¶It is as sure as you are Roderigo,
¶Were I the Moore, I would not be Iago:
¶In following him, I follow but my selfe.
65Heauen is my iudge, not I,
For loue and duty, but seeming so,
¶For my peculiar end.
¶For when my outward action does demonstrate
¶The natiue act, and figure of my heart,
¶In complement externe, tis not long after,
70But I will weare my heart vpon my sleeue,
¶For Doues to pecke at,
I am not what I am.
¶Rod. What a full fortune does the thicklips owe,
¶If he can carry'et thus?
¶Ia. Call vp her father,
¶And tho he in a fertile climate dwell,
¶Plague him with flyes: tho that his ioy be ioy,
¶Yet throw such changes of vexation out,
¶Ia. Doe with like timerous accent, and dire yell,
¶As when by night and negligence, the fire
¶Is spied in populous Citties.
85Rod. What ho, Brabantio; Seignior Brabantio, ho,
¶Ia. Awake, what ho, Brabantio,
Theeues, theeues, theeues:
¶Looke to your house, you Daughter, and your bags.
¶Theeues, theeues.
¶
Brabantio at a window.
Brab. What is the reason of this terrible summons?
90What is the matter there?
¶Rod. Seignior, is all your family within?
¶Ia. Are all doore lockts?
¶Brab. Why, wherefore aske you this?
¶Euen now, very now, an old blacke Ram
¶Awake the snorting Citizens with the Bell,
¶Bra. Not I, what are you?
¶Rod. My name is Roderigo.
¶I haue charg'd thee, not to haunt about my dores,
¶My daughter is not for thee, and now in madnes,
110Vpon malicious brauery, dost thou come
¶To start my quiet?
¶My spirit and my place haue them in power,
115To make this bitter to thee.
¶My house is not a graunge.
¶we are Ruffians, youle haue your daughter couered with a Barbary
125for Cousens, and Iennits for Iermans.
¶Bra. What prophane wretch art thou?
¶Moore, are now making the Beast with two backs.
¶Iag. You are a Senator.
¶For this delusion.
¶Bra. Strike on the tinder, Ho:
155Giue me a taper, call vp all my people:
¶This accident is not vnlike my dreame,
¶Light I say, light.
¶How euer this may gaule him with some checke,
¶Another of his fathome, they haue not
¶Tho I doe hate him, as I doe hells paines,
Finde him: lead to the Sagittar, the raised search,
¶And there will I be with him. So farewell.
Exit._
175
Enter Barbantio in his night gowne, and seruants
with Torches.
¶Raise all my kindred, are they married thinke you?
¶Rod. Truely I thinke they are.
¶Fathers from hence, trust not your Daughters mindes,
¶By what you see them act, is there not charmes,
¶By which the property of youth and manhood
190May be abus'd? haue you not read Roderigo,
¶Bra. Call vp my brother: O that you had had her,
¶Some one way, some another; doe yon know
195Where we may apprehend her, and the Moore?
¶To get good guard, and goe along with me.
¶I may command at most: get weapons ho,
¶On good Roderigo, Ile deserue your paynes.
Exeunt._
