Othello and Desdemona end up eloping, but all does not end well. In the last act, Othello, believing Desdemona had been unfaithful to him, smothers her in her bed.
Iago's constant manipulation of Othello to this end contributed to his murderous desires, but is the "evidence," planted by Iago, that indicates that Desdemona has been unfaithful to him that most strongly motivates Othello to kill Desdemona.
Othello strangles Desdemona and then Emilia comes in and Iago kills her and then Othello realizes that Desdemona was innocent so in the end he kills himself. Not a happily ever after ending, eh?
Three characters are killed: the two lovers, Othello and Desdemona, and Emilia, who is murdered by the evil Iago.
At the end of the play they are both dead. Assuming that they are in a Catholic country (as Venice and its colonies certainly were) they would be buried separately. Othello, as a suicide, could not be buried in consecrated ground, but Desdemona would be buried in a proper cemetery.
Othello and Desdemona end up eloping, but all does not end well. In the last act, Othello, believing Desdemona had been unfaithful to him, smothers her in her bed.
Iago's constant manipulation of Othello to this end contributed to his murderous desires, but is the "evidence," planted by Iago, that indicates that Desdemona has been unfaithful to him that most strongly motivates Othello to kill Desdemona.
Othello strangles Desdemona and then Emilia comes in and Iago kills her and then Othello realizes that Desdemona was innocent so in the end he kills himself. Not a happily ever after ending, eh?
Three characters are killed: the two lovers, Othello and Desdemona, and Emilia, who is murdered by the evil Iago.
She says that she will eventually get bored of Othello because he is much older then her so she will want youth.
At the end of the play they are both dead. Assuming that they are in a Catholic country (as Venice and its colonies certainly were) they would be buried separately. Othello, as a suicide, could not be buried in consecrated ground, but Desdemona would be buried in a proper cemetery.
Certainly. It is a tragedy, as the characters we sympathize with end up dead. It is domestic, because the locus of the tragic events is the marriage between Othello and Desdemona.
towards the end. Cause they started from the bottom, now they there! Cha-Cha!
In the end himself... Iago planted the seeds of doubt in his mind to get what he wanted, But if Othello REALLY loved Desdomona then he would of not believed the 'imaginary proof' that Iago told him, and wouldn't of doubted her in the first place. In the end it was Othello whol literally went insane with Jealousy, it engulfed him and ultimately controlled him.
Dramatically, the handkerchief is a MacGuffin; it is an object which keeps the plot going because of the pursuit of it. Iago gets possession of it then implants the suggestion in Othello's mind that Desdemona has given it away. Othello's pursuit of it becomes his pursuit of evidence to prove adultery. In the end it also is the object which unmasks Iago and brings about the horrible realization of the truth in Othello. The handkerchief symbolizes Othello and Desdemona's love and wedded bliss. He gave it to Desdemona as he gave her his love and asked her to be his wife. Later Iago makes him believe that she has given the handkerchief to Cassio, symbolizing her giving her love and her body sexually to Cassio, which should have been between her and Othello. Finally it is revealed that the handkerchief was stolen, symbolizing that Iago has stolen Othello's love for Desdemona and replaced it with hate, and has stolen their marital happiness from them.
Othello kills Desdemona at Iago's suggestion, then finds out that he has been duped from Iago's wife Emilia. Iago kills Emilia and is hauled away to jail. Othello, horrified at what he has done, kills himself. Cassio takes over.
At the end of Act 3 in Shakespeare's Othello, the handkerchief is in Bianca's possession. She is a courtesan who receives it from Cassio. The handkerchief is significant because it was a gift from Othello to Desdemona and serves as a key plot point in the play as Iago uses it to manipulate Othello's emotions.