324300Enter Duke and Senators, set at a Table with lights 325302Duke. There is no Compo
sition in the
se newes,
3273041 Sena. Indeede they are di
sproportioned,
328305My letters
say, a hundred and
seuen Gallies.
329306Du. And mine a hundred and forty.
3303072 Sena. And mine two hundred:
331308But though they iumpe not on a iu
st account,
332309As in the
se ca
ses, where they aym'd reports,
333310Tis oft with di
fference, yet doe they all con
firme
334311A
Turkish fleete, and bearing vp to
Cipresse. 335312Du. Nay, it is po
ssible enough to iudgement:
336313I doe not
so
secure me to the error,
337314But the mayne Articles I doe approue
338315In fearefull
sen
se.
Enter a Messenger. 339316One within. What ho, what ho, what ho?
341317Sailor. A me
ssenger from the Galley.
343319Sailor, The
Tnrkish preparation makes for
Rhodes,
344320So was I bid report here, to the
state.
346321Du. How
say you by this change?
3473221 Sena. This cannot be by no a
ssay of rea
son ---
349324To keepe vs in fal
se gaze: when we con
sider
350325The importancy of
Cypresse to the
Turke:
351326And let our
selues againe, but vnder
stand,
352327That as it more concernes the
Turke then
Rhodes,
353328So may he with more facile que
stion beare it.
361329Dn. And in all con
fidence, hee's not for
Rhodes.
362330Officer. Here is more newes.
Enter a 2. Messenger. 364331Mes. The
Ottamites, reuerend and gracious,
365332Steering with due cour
se, toward the I
sle of
Rhodes,
366333Haue there inioynted with an after
fleete
368334Of 30.
saile, and now they doe re
sterine
369335Their backward cour
se, bearing with franke appearance
370336Their purpo
ses towards
Cypresse: Seignior
Montano,
371337Your tru
sty and mo
st valiant
seruitor,
372338With his free duty recommends you thus,
373339And prayes you to beleeue him.
374340Du. Tis certaine then for
Cypresse,
375341Marcus Luccicos is not here in Towne.
3763421 Sena. Hee's now in
Florence.
377343Du. Write from vs, wi
sh him po
st, po
st ha
st di
spatch.
380344Enter Brabantio, Othello, Roderigo, Iago, Cassio, 381345Desdemona, and Officers. 3793461 Sena. Here comes
Brabantio and the valiant
Moore.
382347Du. Valiant
Othello, we mu
st straite imploy you,
383348Again
st the generall enemy
Ottaman;
384349I did not
see you, welcome gentle Seignior,
385350We lacke your coun
sell, and your helpe to night,
386351Bra. So did I yours, good your Grace pardon me,
387352Neither my place, nor ought I heard of bu
sine
sse
388353Hath rais'd me from my bed, nor doth the generall care
389354Take any hold of me, for my particular griefes,
390355Is of
so
floodgate and orebearing nature,
391356That it engluts, and
swallowes other
sorrowes,
392357And it is
still it
selfe.
393358Du. Why, what's the matter?
394359Bra. My daughter, O my daughter.
397362She is abus'd,
stolne from me and corrupted,
398363By
spels and medicines, bought of mountebancks,
399364For nature
so prepo
sterou
sly to erre,
401365Saunce witchcraft could not.
402366Du. Who ere he be, that in this foule proceeding
403367Hath thus beguild your daughter of her
selfe,
404368And you of her, the bloody booke of Law,
405369You
shall your
selfe, read in the bitter letter,
406370After its owne
sen
se, tho our proper
sonne
408372Bra. Humbly I thanke your Grace;
409373Here is the man, this Moore, whom now it
seemes
410374Your
speciall mandate, for the State a
ffaires
412376All. We are very
sorry for't.
413377Du, What in your owne part can you
say to this?
414378Bra. Nothing, but this is
so.
415379Oth. Mo
st potent, graue, and reuerend Seigniors,
416380My very noble and approoued good mai
sters:
417381That I haue tane away this old mans daughter,
418382It is mo
st true: true, I haue married her,
419383The very head and front of my o
ffending,
420384Hath this extent no more. Rude am I in my
speech,
421385And little ble
st with the
set phra
se of peace,
422386For
since the
se armes of mine had
seuen yeares pith,
423387Till now
some nine Moones wa
sted, they haue vs'd
424388Their deare
st a
ction in the tented
field,
425389And little of this great world can I
speake,
426390More then pertaines to feate of broyle, and battaile,
427391And therefore little
shall I grace my cau
se,
428392In
speaking for my
selfe; yet by your gracious patience,
429393I will a round vnuarni
sh'd tale deliuer,
430394Of my whole cour
se of loue, what drugs, what charmes,
432395What coniuration, and what mighty Magicke,
433396(For
such proceedings am I charg'd withall:)
435398Bra. A maiden neuer bold of
spirit,
436399So
still and quiet, that her motion
437400Blu
sht at her
selfe: and
she in
spite of nature,
438401Of yeares, of Countrey, credit, euery thing,
439402To fall in loue with what
she fear'd to looke on?
440403It is a iudgement maimd, and mo
st imperfe
ct,
441404That will confe
sse perfe
ction,
so would erre
442405Again
st all rules of Nature, and mu
st be driuen,
443406To
finde out pra
cti
ses of cunning hell,
444407Why this
should be, I therefore vouch againe,
445408That with
some mixtures powerfull ore the blood,
446409Or with
some dram coniur'd to this e
ffe
ct,
448411Du. To youth this is no proofe,
449412Without more certaine and more ouert te
st,
450413The
se are thin habits, and poore likelihoods,
451414Of moderne
seemings, you preferre again
st him.
4524151 Sena. But
Othello speake,
453416Did you by indire
ct and forced cour
ses,
454417Subdue and poi
son this young maides a
ffe
ctions?
455418Or came it by reque
st, and
such faire que
stion,
456419As
soule to
soule a
ffoordeth?
458421Send for the Lady to the Sagittar,
459422And let her
speake of me before her father;
460423If you doe
finde me foule in her report,
462424Not onely take away, but let your
sentence
464426Du. Fetch
Desdemona hither.
Exit two or three. 465427Oth. Ancient condu
ct them, you be
st know the place:
467428And till
she come, as faithfull as to heauen,
469429So iu
stly to your graue eares I'le pre
sent,
470430How I did thriue in this faire Ladyes loue,
473433Oth. Her Father loued me, oft inuited me,
474434Still que
stioned me the
story of my life,
475435From yeare to yeare; the battailes,
seiges, fortunes
477437I ran it through, euen from my boyi
sh dayes,
478438Toth' very moment that he bade me tell it.
479439Wherein I
spake of mo
st di
sa
strous chances,
480440Of moouing accident of
flood and
field;
481441Of heire-breadth
scapes ith imminent deadly breach;
482442Of being taken by the in
solent foe
: 483443And
sold to
slauery, and my redemption thence,
484444And with it all my trauells Hi
storie;
485445Wherein of Antrees va
st, and De
serts idle,
486446Rough quarries, rocks and hils, who
se heads touch heauen,
487447It was my hent to
speake,
such was the proce
sse:
488448And of the
Cannibals, that each other eate;
489449The
Anthropophagie, and men who
se heads
490450Doe grow beneath their
shoulders: this to heare,
491451Would
Desdemona seriou
sly incline;
492452But
still the hou
se a
ffaires would draw her thence,
493453And euer as
she could with ha
st di
spatch,
494454Shee'd come againe, and with a greedy eare
495455Deuoure vp my di
scour
se; which I ob
seruing,
496456Tooke once a plyant houre, and found good meanes
497457To draw from her a prayer of earne
st heart,
498458That I would all my pilgrimage dilate,
499459Whereof by parcell
she had
something heard,
500460But not intentiuely, I did con
sent,
501461And ofren did beguile her of her teares,
502462When I did
speake of
some di
stre
ssed
stroake
503463That my youth
su
ffered: my
story being done;
504464She gaue me for my paines a world of
sighes;
505465She
swore Ifaith twas
strange, twas pa
ssing
strange;
506466Twas pittifull, twas wondrous pittifull;
507467She wi
sht
she had not heard it, yet
she wi
sht
508468That Heauen had made her
such a man:
she thanked me,
509469And bad me, if I had a friend that loued her,
510470I
should but teach him how to tell my
story,
511471And that would wooe her. Vpon this heate I
spake
: 512472She lou'd me for the dangers I had pa
st. 513473And I lou'd her that
she did pitty them.
514474This onely is the witchcraft I haue vs'd:
516477Enter Desdemona, Iago, and the rest. 517478Du. I thinke this tale would win my daughter to, ----
518479Good
Brabantio, take vp this mangled matter at the be
st,
519480Men doe their broken weapons rather v
se,
521482Bra. I pray you heare her
speake.
522483If
she confe
sse that
she was halfe the wooer,
523484De
stru
ction lite on me, if my bad blame
524485Light on the man. Come hither gentle mi
stre
sse
: 525486Doe you perceiue in all this noble company,
526487Where mo
st you owe obedience?
528489I doe perceiue here a deuided duty:
529490To you I am bound for life and education;
530491My life and education both doe learne me
531492How to re
spe
ct you, you are Lord of all my duty,
532493I am hitherto your daughter, But heere's my husband:
533494And
so much duty as my mother
shewed
534495To you, preferring you before her father,
535496So much I challenge, that I may profe
sse,
536497Due to the Moore my Lord.
537498Bra. God bu'y, I ha done:
538499Plea
se it your Grace, on to the State a
ffaires;
539500I had rather to adopt a child then get it;
541502I here doe giue thee that, with all my heart
543503I would keepe from thee: for your
sake Iewell,
544504I am glad at
soule. I haue no other child,
545505For thy e
scape would teach me tyranny,
546506To hang clogs on em, I haue done my Lord.
547507Du. Let me
speake like your
selfe, and lay a
sentence
549508Which as a gree
se or
step may helpe the
se louers
550510When remedies are pa
st, the griefes are ended,
551511By
seeing the wor
st, which late on hopes depended,
552512To mourne a mi
scheife that is pa
st and gone,
553513Is the next way to draw more mi
schiefe on;
554514What cannot be pre
seru'd when fortune takes,
555515Patience her iniury a mockery makes.
556516The rob'd that
smiles,
steales
something from the thiefe,
557517He robs him
selfe, that
spends a bootele
sse griefe.
558518Bra. So let the
Turke, of
Cypres vs beguile,
559519We lo
se it not
so long as we can
smile;
560520He beares the
sentence well that nothing beares,
561521But the free comfort, which from thence he heares:
562522But he beares both the
sentence and the
sorrow,
563523That to pay griefe, mu
st of poore patience borrow.
564524The
se
sentences to
sugar, or to gall,
565525Being
strong on both
sides, are equiuocall:
566526But words are words, I neuer yet did heare,
567527That the bruis'd heart was pierced through the eare
: 568528Be
seech you now, to the a
ffaires of the
state.
569529Du. The
Turke with mo
st mighty preparation makes for
Cipres:
570530Othello, the fortitude of the place, is be
st knowne to you, and tho we
571531haue there a
sub
stitute of mo
st allowed
su
fficiency, yet opinion, a
so
- 573532ueraigne mi
stre
sse of e
ffe
cts, throwes a more
safer voyce on you; you
574533mu
st therefore bee content to
slubber the glo
sse of your new for
- 575534tunes, with this more
stubborne and boi
sterous expedition.
577535Oth. The tyrant cu
stome mo
st great Senators,
578536Hath made the
flinty and
steele Cooch of warre,
579537My thrice driuen bed of downe: I doe agnize
580538A naturall and prompt alacrity,
581539I
finde in hardne
sse, and would vndertake
582540This pre
sent warres again
st the
Ottamites,
583541Mo
st humbly therefore, bending to your State,
584542I craue
fit di
spo
sition for my wife,
585543Due reuerence of place and exhibition,
586544Which
such accomodation? and be
sort
587545As leuels with her breeding.
588546Du. If you plea
se, bee't at her fathers.
589547Bra. Ile not haue it
so.
591549Desd. Nor I, I would not there re
side,
592550To put my father in impatient thoughts,
593551By being in his eye: mo
st gracious Duke,
594552To my vnfolding lend a gracious eare,
595553And let me
finde a charter in your voyce,
596554And if my
simplene
sse. ----
597555Du. What would you ----
speake.
598556Des. That I did loue the Moore, to liue with him,
599557My downe right violence, and
scorne of Fortunes,
600558May trumpet to the world
: my hearts
subdued,
601559Fuen to the vtmo
st plea
sure of my Lord:
602560I
saw
Othelloes vi
ssage in his minde,
603561And to his Honors, and his valiant parts
604562Did I my
soule and fortunes con
secrate:
605563So that deere Lords, if I be left behinde,
606564A Mothe of peace, and he goe to the warre,
607565The rites for which I loue him, are bereft me,
608566And I a heauy interim
shall
support,
609567By his deare ab
sence, let me goe with him.
610568Oth. Your voyces Lords: be
seech you let her will,
611569Haue a free way, I therefore beg it not
612570To plea
se the pallat of my appetite,
613571Nor to comply with heate, the young a
ffe
cts
614572In my defun
ct, and proper
satisfa
ction,
615573But to be free and bounteous of her mind,
616574And heauen defend your good
soules that you thinke
617575I will your
serious and good bu
sine
sse
scant,
618576For
she is with me; --- no, when light-winged toyes,
619577And feather'd Cupid foyles with wanton dulne
sse,
620578My
speculatiue and a
ctiue in
struments,
621579That my di
sports, corrupt and taint my bu
sine
sse,
622580Let hu
swiues make a
skellett of my Helme,
623581And all indigne and ba
se aduer
sities,
624582Make head again
st my reputation.
625583Du. Be it, as you
shall priuately determine,
626584Either for
stay or going, the a
ffaires cry ha
st,
627585And
speede mu
st an
swer, you mu
st hence to night,
630589Du. At ten i'the morning here weel meete againe
. 631590Othello, leaue
some o
fficer behind,
632591And he
shall our Commi
ssion bring to you,
633592With
such things el
se of quality or re
spe
ct,
635594Oth. Plea
se your Grace, my Ancient,
636595A man he is of hone
sty and tru
st,
637596To his conueyance I a
ssigne my wife,
638597With what el
se needefull your good Grace
shall thinke,
641600Good night to euery one, and noble Seignior,
642601If vertue no delighted beauty lacke,
643602Your
son in law is farre more faire then blacke.
6446031 Sena. Adue braue Moore, v
se
Desdemona well.
645604Bra. Looke to her Moore, haue a quicke eye to
see,
646605She has deceiu'd her father, may doe thee.
Exeunt. 647606Oth. My life vpon her faith: hone
st Iago,
648607My
Desdemona mu
st I leaue to thee,
649608I preethee let thy wife attend on her,
650609And bring her after in the be
st aduantage;
651610Come
Desdemona, I haue but an houre
652611Of loue, of worldly matters, and dire
ction,
653612To
spend with thee, we mu
st obey the time.
654613Rod. Iago.
Exit Moore and Desdemona. 655614Iag, What
saie
st thou noble heart?
656615Rod. What will I doe thinke
st thou?
657616Iag. Why goe to bed and
sleepe.
658617Rod. I will incontinently drowne my
selfe.
659618Iag. Well, if thou doe
st, I
shall neuer loue thee after it,
619Why, thou
silly Gentleman.
661620Rod. It is
silline
sse to liue, when to liue is a torment, and then we
662621haue a pre
scription, to dye when death is our Phy
sition.
664622Iag. I ha look'd vpon the world for foure times
seuen yeares,
665623and
since I could di
stingui
sh betweene a bene
fit, and an iniury, I ne
- 666624uer found a man that knew how to loue him
selfe: ere I would
say
667625I would drowne my
selfe, for the loue of a Ginny Hen, I would
669626change my humanity with a Baboone.
670627Rod. What
should I do? I confe
sse it is my
shame to be
so fond,
671628but it is not in my vertue to amend it
. 672629Iag. Vertue? a
fig, tis in our
selues, that wee are thus, or thus,
673630our bodies are gardens, to the which our wills are Gardiners,
so that
674631if we will plant Nettles, or
sow Lettice,
set I
sop, and weed vp Time;
676632supply it with one gender of hearbes, or di
stra
ct it with many; ei
- 677633ther to haue it
sterrill with Idlene
sse, or manur'd with Indu
stry, why
678634the power, and corrigible Authority of this, lies in our wills. If the
679635ballance of our liues had not one
scale of rea
son, to poi
se another of
680636sen
suality; the blood and ba
sene
sse of our natures, would condu
ct 682637vs to mo
st prepo
sterous conclu
sions. But wee haue rea
son to coole
683638our raging motions, our carnall
stings, our vnbitted lu
sts; whereof
684639I take this, that you call loue to be a
se
ct, or
syen.
687641Iag. It is meerly a lu
st of the blood, and a permi
ssion of the will:
688642Come, be a man; drowne thy
selfe
? drowne Cats and blinde Pup
- 689643pies
: I profe
sse me thy friend, and I confe
sse me knit to thy de
ser
- 690644uing, with cables of perdurable toughne
sse; I could neuer better
691645steede thee then now. Put money in thy pur
se; follow the
se warres,
693646defeate thy fauour with an v
surp'd beard; I
say, put money in thy
694647pur
se. It cannot be, that
Desdemona should long continue her loue
695648vnto the Moore, --- put money in thy pur
se, -- nor he to her; it was
696649a violent commencement, and thou
shalt
see an an
swerable
seque
- 697650stration: put but money in thy pur
se. ---The
se Moores are change
- 699651able in their wills: ---
fill thy pur
se with money. The food that to
700652him now, is as lu
shious as Locu
sts,
shall be to him
shortly as acerbe
701653as the Colloquintida. When
shee is
sated with his body,
shee will
703654finde the error of her choyce;
shee mu
st haue change,
shee mu
st.
655Therefore put money in thy pur
se: if thou wilt needes damme
704656thy
selfe, doe it a more delicate way then drowning; make all
705657the money thou can
st. If
san
ctimony, and a fraile vow, betwixt an
707658erring
Barbarian, and a
super
subtle
Venetian, be not too hard for my
708659wits, and all the tribe of hell, thou
shalt enioy her; therefore make
709660money, --- a pox a drowning, tis cleane out of the way:
seeke thou
710661rather to be hang'd in compa
ssing thy ioy, then to bee drowned, and
713663Rod. Wilt thou be fa
st to my hopes
? 715664Iag. Thou art
sure of me ---goe, make money --- I haue told
716665thee often, and I tell thee againe, and againe, I hate the Moore, my
717666cau
se is harted, thine has no le
sse rea
son, let vs be communicatiue in
718667our reuenge again
st him: If thou can
st cuckold him, thou doe
st thy
719668selfe a plea
sure, and me a
sport. There are many euents in the womb
721669of Time, which will be deliuered. Trauerce, go, prouide thy money,
722670we will haue more of this to morrow, Adiue.
724671Rod. Where
shall we meete i'th morning.
726673Rod. I'le be with thee betimes.
727674Iag. Go to, farewell: ---doe you heare
Roderigo?
727.2676Iag. No more of drowning, doe you heare
? 727.3677Rod. I am chang'd.
Exit Roderigo. 727.4678Iag. Goe to, farewell, put money enough in your pur
se:
729679Thus doe I euer make my foole my pur
se:
730680For I mine owne gain'd knowledge
should prophane,
731681If I would time expend with
such a
snipe,
732682But for my
sport and pro
fit: I hate the Moore,
733683And tis thought abroad, that twixt my
sheetes
734684Ha's done my o
ffice; I know not, if't be true ---
735685Yet I, for meere
su
spition in that kind,
736686Will doe, as if for
surety: he holds me well,
737687The better
shall my purpo
se worke on him.
738688Cassio's a proper man, let me
see now,
739689To get this place, and to make vp my will,
740690A double knauery --- how, how, --- let me
see,
741691After
some time, to abu
se
Othelloe's eare,
742692That he is too familiar with his wife
: 743693He has a per
son and a
smooth di
spo
se,
744694To be
su
spe
cted, fram'd to make women fal
se:
745695The Moore a free and open nature too,
746696That thinkes men hone
st, that but
seemes to be
so:
747697And will as tenderly be led bit'h no
se --- as A
sses are:
749698I ha't, it is ingender'd: Hell and night
750699Mu
st bring this mon
strous birth to the worlds light.