ACT FOUR Scene One
奥瑟罗 作者:莎士比亚
奥瑟罗 作者:莎士比亚
[Cyprus.Before
the
castle.Enter
OTHELLO
and
IAGO]
IAGO
Will
you
think
so?
OTHELLO
Think
so,Iago!
IAGO
What,
To
kiss
in
private?
OTHELLO
An
unauthorizedkiss.
IAGO
Or
to
be
nakedwith
her
friend
in
bed
An
hour
or
more,not
meaning
any
harm?
OTHELLO
Naked
in
bed,Iago,and
not
mean
harm!
It
is
hypocrisyagainst
the
devil:
They
that
mean
virtuously,and
yet
do
so,
The
devil
their
virtue
tempts,
and
they
tempt
heaven.
IAGO
So
they
do
nothing,’tis
a
venialslip:
But
if
I
give
my
wife
a
handkerchief,——
OTHELLO
What
then?
IAGO
Why,then,’tis
hers,my
lord;and,being
hers,
She
may,I
think,bestow’ton
any
man.
OTHELLO
She
is
protectressof
her
honour
too:
May
she
give
that?
IAGO
Her
honour
is
an
essencethat’s
not
seen;
They
have
it
very
oft
that
have
it
not:
But,for
the
handkerchief,——
OTHELLO
By
heaven,I
would
most
gladly
have
forgot
it.
Thou
said’st,it
comes
o’ermy
memory,
As
doth
the
raveno’er
the
infectedhouse,
Bodingto
all——he
had
my
handkerchief.
IAGO
Ay,what
of
that?
OTHELLO
That’s
not
so
good
now.
IAGO
What,
If
I
had
said
I
had
seen
him
do
you
wrong?
Or
heard
him
say,——as
knaves
be
such
abroad,
Who
having,by
their
own
importunatesuit,
Or
voluntarydotageof
some
mistress,
Convincedor
supplied
them,cannot
choose
But
they
must
blab——
OTHELLO
Hath
he
said
any
thing?
IAGO
He
hath,my
lord;but
be
you
well
assured,
No
more
than
he’ll
unswear.
OTHELLO
What
hath
he
said?
IAGO
‘Faith,that
he
did——I
know
not
what
he
did
OTHELLO
What?what?
IAGO
Lie——
OTHELLO
With
her?
IAGO
With
her,on
her;what
you
will.
OTHELLO
Lie
with
her!lie
on
her!We
say
lie
on
her,when
they
belieher.
Lie
with
her!that’s
fulsome.
——Handkerchief——confessions——handkerchief!——To
confess,and
be
hanged
for
his
labour;——first,to
be
hanged,and
then
to
confess.——I
trembleat
it.
Nature
would
not
investherself
in
such
shadowing
passion
without
some
instruction.It
is
words
that
shake
me
thus.Pish
!Noses,ears,and
lips.
—Is’t
possible?—Confess—handkerchief!—O
devil!—
[Falls
in
a
trance.]
IAGO
Work
on,My
medicine,work!Thus
credulousfools
are
caught;
And
many
worthy
and
chastedameseven
thus,
All
guiltless,meet
reproach.What,ho!my
lord!
My
lord,I
say!Othello!
[Enter
CASSIO]
How
now,Cassio!
CASSIO
What’s
the
matter?
IAGO
My
lord
is
fall’n
into
an
epilepsy:
This
is
his
second
fit;he
had
one
yesterday.
CASSIO
Rubhim
about
the
temples.
IAGO
No,forbear;
The
lethargymust
have
his
quiet
course:
If
not,
he
foams
at
mouth
and
by
and
by
Breaks
out
to
savage
madness.
Look
he
stirs:
Do
you
withdraw
yourself
a
little
while,
He
will
recover
straight:when
he
is
gone,
I
would
on
great
occasionspeak
with
you.
[Exit
CASSIO]
How
is
it,general?have
you
not
hurt
your
head?
OTHELLO
Dost
thou
mockme?
IAGO
I
mock
you!no,by
heaven.
Would
you
would
bear
your
fortune
like
a
man!
OTHELLO
A
hornedman’s
a
monster
and
a
best.
IAGO
There’s
many
a
beast
then
in
a
populouscity,
And
many
a
civilmonster.
OTHELLO
Did
he
confess
it?
IAGO
Good
sir,be
a
man;
Think
every
bearded
fellow
that’s
but
yoked
May
draw
with
you:there’s
millions
now
alive
That
nightly
lie
in
those
unproperbeds
Which
they
dare
swear
peculiar:your
case
is
better.
O,’tis
the
spiteof
hell,the
fiend’s
arch-mock,
To
lip
a
wanton
in
a
securecouch
,
And
to
suppose
her
chaste!No,let
me
know;
And
knowing
what
I
am,I
know
what
she
shall
be.
OTHELLO
O,thou
art
wise;’tis
certain.
IAGO
Stand
you
awhile
apart;
Confine
yourself
but
in
a
patient
list.
Whilst
you
were
here
o’erwhelmedwith
your
grief——
A
passion
most
unsuiting
such
a
man——
Cassio
came
hither:I
shifted
him
away,
And
laid
good’scuseupon
your
ecstasy,
Bade
him
anonreturn
and
here
speak
with
me;
The
which
he
promised.Do
but
encaveyourself,
And
mark
the
fleers,the
gibes
,and
notable
scorns’,
That
dwell
in
every
region’of
his
face;
For
I
will
make
him
tell
the
tale
anew⒀,
Where,how,how
oft,how
long
ago,
and
when
He
hath,and
is
again
to
cope
your
wife:
I
say,but
mark
his
gesture.Marry,patience;
Or
I
shall
say
you
are
all
in
allin
spleen,
And
nothing
of
a
man.
OTHELLO
Dost
thou
hear,Iago?
I
will
be
found
most
cunningin
my
patience;
But——dost
thou
hear?——most
bloody.
IAGO
That’s
not
amiss;
But
yet
keep
time
in
all.Will
you
withdraw?
[OTHELLO
retires]
Now
will
I
question
Cassio
of
Bianca,
A
housewife
that
by
selling
her
desires
Buys
herself
bread
and
clothes:it
is
a
creature
That
doteson
Cassio;as
’tis
the
strumpet’splague
To
beguilemany
and
be
beguiled
by
one:
He,when
he
hears
of
her,cannot
refrain
From
the
excessof
laughter.Here
he
comes:
[Re-enter
CASSIO]
As
he
shall
smile,Othello
shall
go
mad;
And
his
unbookishjealousy
must
construe
Poor
Cassio’s
smiles,gestures
and
light
behavior,
Quite
in
the
wrong.How
do
you
now,lieutenant?
CASSIO
The
worser
that
you
give
me
the
addition
Whose
want
even
kills
me.
IAGO
Ply’
Desdemona
well,and
you
are
sure
on’t.
[Speaking
lower]
Now,if
this
suit
lay
in
Bianco’s
power,
How
quickly
should
you
speed!
CASSIO
Alas,poor
caitiff!
OTHELLO
look,how
he
laughs
already!
IAGO
I
never
knew
woman
love
man
so.
CASSIO
Alas,poor
rogue!I
think,i’faith,she
loves
me.
OTHELLO
Now
he
deniesit
faintly,and
laughs
it
out.
IAGO
Do
you
hear,Cassio?
OTHELLO
Now
he
importunes
him
To
tell
it
o’er:go
to;well
said,well
said.
IAGO
She
gives
it
outthat
you
shall
marry
hey:
Do
you
intend
it?
CASSIO
Ha,ha,ha!
OTHELLO
Do
you
triumph,Roman?do
you
triumph?
CASSIO
I
marry
her!what?a
customer!Prithee,bear
some
charityto
my
wit:do
not
think
it
so
unwholesome.
Ha,ha,ha!
OTHELLO
So,so,so,so:they
laugh
that
win.
IAGO
‘Faith,the
cry
goes
thatyou
shall
marry
her.
CASSIO
Prithee,say
true.
IAGO
I
am
a
very
villain
else.
OTHELLO
Have
you
scoredme?Well.
CASSIO
This
is
the
monkey’s
own
giving
out:she
is
persuaded
I
will
marry
her,
out
of
her
own
love
and
flattery,not
out
of
my
promise.
OTHELLO
Iago
beckonsme;now
he
begins
the
story.
CASSIO
She
was
here
even
now;she
hauntsme
in
every
place.
I
was
the
other
daytalking
on
the
sea-bank
with
certain
Venetians;and
thithercomes
the
bauble,
and,by
this
hand,she
falls
me
thus
about
my
neck——
OTHELLO
Crying’O
dear
Cassio!’as
it
were:his
gesture
imports
it.
CASSIO
So
hangs,and
lolls,and
weeps
upon
me;so
hales,
and
pulls
me:ha,ha,ha!
OTHELLO
Now
he
tells
how
she
pluckedhim
to
my
chamber.O,
I
see
that
nose
of
yours,
but
not
that
dog
I
shall
throw
it
to.
CASSIO
Well,I
must
leave
her
company.
IAGO
Before
me!look,where
she
comes.
CASSIO
‘Tis
such
another
fitchew
!marry
a
perfumedone.
[Enter
BIANCA]
What
do
you
mean
by
this
haunting
of
me?
BIANCA
Let
the
devil
and
his
dam
haunt
you!What
did
you
mean
by
that
same
handkerchief
you
gave
me
even
now?
I
was
a
fine
fool
to
take
it.
I
must
take
out
the
work?——A
likely
piece
of
work,that
you
should
find
it
in
your
chamber,
and
not
know
who
left
it
there!
This
is
some
minx’stoken,and
I
must
take
out
the
work?There;give
it
your
hobby-horse:where
so
ever
you
had
it,I’ll
take
out
no
work
on’t.
CASSIO
How
now,my
sweet
Bianca!how
now!how
now!
OTHELLO
By
heaven,that
should
be
my
handkerchief!
BIANCA
An
you’ll
come
to
supper
to-night,you
may;an
you
will
not,come
you
are
next
prepared
for.[Exit.]
IAGO
After
her,after
her.
CASSIO
‘Faith,I
must;she’ll
railin
the
street
else.
IAGO
Will
you
supthere?
CASSIO
‘Faith,I
intend
so.
IAGO
Well,I
may
chance
to
see
you;for
I
would
very
fain
speak
with
you.
CASSIO
Prithee,come;will
you?
IAGO
Go
to;say
no
more.
[Exit
CASSIO]
OTHELLO
[Advancing]How
shall
I
murderhim,Iago?
IAGO
Did
you
perceivehow
he
laughed
at
his
vice?
OTHELLO
O
Iago!
IAGO
And
did
you
see
the
handkerchief?
OTHELLO
Was
that
mine?
IAGO
Yours
by
this
hand:and
to
see
how
he
prizes
the
foolish
woman
your
wife!she
gave
it
him,
and
he
hath
given
it
his
whore.
OTHELLO
I
would
have
him
nine
years
a-killing.
A
fine
woman!a
fair
woman!a
sweet
woman!
IAGO
Nay,you
must
forget
that.
OTHELLO
Ay,let
her
rot,and
perish,and
be
damned
to-night;
for
she
shall
not
live:no,my
heart
is
turned
to
stone;I
strike
it,and
it
hurts
my
hand.O,the
world
hath
not
a
sweeter
creature:she
might
lie
by
an
emperor’s
side
and
command
him
tasks.
IAGO
Nay,that’s
not
your
way.
OTHELLO
Hang
her!Ido
but
say
what
she
is:so
delicate
with
her
needle:an
admirablemusician:O!she
will
sing
the
savageness
out
of
a
bear:of
so
high
and
plenteouswit
and
invention:——
IAGO
She’s
the
worse
for
all
this.
OTHELLO
O,a
thousand
thousand
times:and
then,of
so
gentle
a
condition!
IAGO
Ay,too
gentle.
OTHELLO
Nay,that’s
certain:but
yet
the
pity
of
it,lago!
O
Iago,the
pity
of
it,Iago!
IAGO
If
you
are
so
fond
over
her
iniquity,give
her
patentto
offend;for,if
it
touch
not
you,it
comes
near
nobody.
OTHELLO
I
will
chop
her
into
messes:cuckold
me!
IAGO
O,’tis
foulin
her.
OTHELLO
With
mine
officer!
IAGO
That’s
fouler.
OTHELLO
Get
me
some
poison,Iago;this
night:I’ll
not
expostulatewith
her,lesther
body
and
beauty
unprovidemy
mind
again:this
night,Iago.
IAGO
Do
it
not
with
poison,strangleher
in
her
bed,even
the
bed
she
hath
contaminated.
OTHELLO
Good,good:the
justice
of
it
pleases:very
good.
IAGO
And
for
Cassio,let
me
be
his
undertaker:you
shall
hear
more
by
midnight.
OTHELLO
Excellent
good.
[A
trumpetwithin]
What
trumpet
is
that
same?
IAGO
Something
from
Venice,sure.’Tis
Lodovico
Come
from
the
duke:and,see,your
wife
is
with
him.
[Enter
LODOVICO,DESDEMONA,and
Attendants]
LODOVICO
Save
you,worthygeneral!
OTHELLO
With
all
my
heart,sir.
LODOVICO
The
duke
and
senatorsof
Venice
greet
you.
[Gives
him
a
letter]
OTHELLO
I
kiss
the
instrument
of
their
pleasures
[Opens
the
letter,and
reads]
DESDEMONA
And
what’s
the
news,good
cousinLodovico?
IAGO
I
am
very
glad
to
see
you,signio
Welcome
to
Cyprus.
LODOVICO
I
thank
you.How
does
Lieutenant
Cassio?
IAGO
Lives,sir.
DESDEMONA
Cousin,there’s
fall’nbetween
him
and
my
lord
An
unkind
breach:but
you
shall
make
all
well.
OTHELLO
Are
you
sure
of
that?
DESDEMONA
My
lord?
OTHELLO[Reads]
‘This
fail
you
not
to
do,as
you
will——’
LODOVICO
He
did
not
call;he’s
busy
in
the
paper.
Is
there
division’twixtmy
lord
and
Cassio?
DESDEMONA
A
most
unhappy
one:I
would
do
much
To
atonethem,for
the
love
I
bear
to
Cassio.
OTHELLO
Fire
and
brimstone!
DESDEMONA
My
lord?
OTHELLO
Are
you
wise?
DESDEMONA
What,is
he
angry?
LODOVICO
May
be
the
letter
moved
him;
For,as
I
think,they
do
command
him
home,
Deputing.Cassio
in
his
government
DESDEMONA
Trust
me,I
am
glad
on’t.
OTHELLO
Indeed!
DESDEMONA
My
lord?
OTHELLO
I
am
glad
to
see
you
mad.
DESDEMONA
Why,sweet
Othello,——
OTHELLO
[Striking
her]Devil!
DESDEMONA
I
have
not
deserved
this.
LODOVICO
My
lord,this
would
not
be
believed
in
Venice,
Though
I
should
swearI
saw’t:’Tis
very
much:
Make
her
amends;she
weeps.
OTHELLO
O
devil,devil!
If
that
the
earth
could
teemwith
woman’s
tears,
Each
drop
she
falls
would
prove
a
crocodileOut
of
my
sight!
DESDEMONA
I
will
not
stay
to
offend
you.
[Going]
LODOVICO
Truly,an
obedientlady:
I
do
beseech
your
lordship,call
her
back.
OTHELLO
Mistress!
DESDEMONA
My
lord?
OTHELLO
What
would
you
with
her,sir?
LODOVICO
Who,I,my
lord?
OTHELLO
Ay;you
did
wish
that
I
would
make
her
turn:
Sir,she
can
turn,and
turn,and
yet
go
on,
And
turn
again;and
she
can
weep,sir,weep;
And
she’s
obedient,as
you
say,obedient,
Very
obedient.Proceed
you
in
your
tears.
Concerning
this,sir,——O
well-painted
passion!——
I
am
commanded
home.Get
you
away;
I’ll
send
foryou
anonSir,I
obey
the
mandate,
And
will
return
to
Venice.Hence,avaunt!
[Exit
DESDEMONA]
Cassio
shall
have
my
place.And,sir,tonight,
I
do
entreatthat
we
may
sup
together:
You
are
welcome,sir,to
Cyprus.——Goats
and
monkeys!
[Exit]
LODOVICO
Is
this
the
noble
Moor
whom
our
full
senate.
Call
all
in
allsufficient?Is
this
the
nature
Whom
passion
could
not
shake?whose
solid
virtue
The
shot
of
accident,nor
dartof
chance,
Could
neither
grazenor
pierce?
IAGO
He
is
much
changed.
LODOVICO
Are
his
wits
safe?is
he
not
lightof
brain?
IAGO
He’s
that
he
is
:I
may
not
breathe
my
censure
What
he
might
be:if
what
he
might
he
is
not,
I
would
to
heaven
he
were
!
LODOVICO
What,strike
his
wife!
IAGO
‘Faith,that
was
not
so
well;yet
would
I
knewThat
stroke
would
prove
the
worst!
LODOVICO
IS
it
his
use?
Or
did
the
letter
work
upon
his
blood,
And
new-create
this
fault?
IAGO
Alas,alas!
It
is
not
honesty
in
me
to
speak
What
I
have
seen
and
known.You
shall
observe
him,
And
his
own
courses
will
denote
him
so
That
I
may
save
my
speech:do
but
go
after,
And
mark
how
he
continues.
LODOVICO
I
am
sorry
that
I
am
deceived
in
him.
[Exeunt]