Act 1 TUT2 - 08 - 12 - 14 - Gobbet and Guidelines
Act 1 TUT2 - 08 - 12 - 14 - Gobbet and Guidelines
Act 1 TUT2 - 08 - 12 - 14 - Gobbet and Guidelines
Write
an
essay
based
on
the
passage
below.
You
are
expected
to
ground
your
response
in
the
given
text.
You
should
identify
the
passage’s
immediate
context
and
relate
it
to
the
following:
• Characterisation
• Imagery
• Theme
Moreover, you should ensure that your response ties this passage to the play as a whole.
(Just for this tutorial you may limit your response to the part in the play you have covered in class)
RODERIGO
What should I do? I confess it is my shame to be so
fond; but it is not in my virtue to amend it.
IAGO
Virtue! a fig! 'tis in ourselves that we are thus
or thus. Our bodies are our gardens, to the which
our wills are gardeners: so that if we will plant
nettles, or sow lettuce, set hyssop and weed up
thyme, supply it with one gender of herbs, or
distract it with many, either to have it sterile
with idleness, or manured with industry, why, the
power and corrigible authority of this lies in our
wills. If the balance of our lives had not one
scale of reason to poise another of sensuality, the
blood and baseness of our natures would conduct us
to most preposterous conclusions: but we have
reason to cool our raging motions, our carnal
stings, our unbitted lusts, whereof I take this that
you call love to be a sect or scion.
This
is
first
tutorial
question
on
Shakespeare’s
Othello
and
the
second
tutorial
in
which
students
are
being
requested
to
focus
on
the
gobbet
extract
option.
The
fact
that
this
tutorial
will
be
assigned
to
the
students
in
December
meant
that
the
passage
needed
to
be
selected
from
the
initial
parts
of
the
play.
Another
consideration
was
that
the
passage
would
not
be
one
of
the
more
popular
selections
(Iago’s
soliloquys
or
Othello’s
famous
speeches)
such
that
students
would
need
to
come
up
with
more
original
responses
rather
than
being
able
to
pre-‐fabricate
existing
notes.
The
passage
should
serve
as
a
platform
for
the
students
to
engage
with
the
text
and
respond
to
it
in
a
way
that
moves
beyond
paraphrasing
since
very
little
actually
‘happens’
on
stage
at
this
point.
It
should
promote
a
focus
on
CHARACTERISATION
and
IMAGERY
which
would
in
turn
lead
to
THEME
where
students
can
easily
realise
how
the
enormous
differences
between
the
intellectual
capacities
of
the
two
speakers
in
the
extract
as
well
as
the
role/s
they
play
in
the
dramatic
work
as
a
whole.
Primarily,
the
students
should
be
first
urged
to
contextualise
the
passage
by
effectively
noting
its
importance
within
the
plot.
At
this
stage
they
should
also
develop
a
well-‐structured
and
coherent
argument
that
shows
how
this
extract
is
in
fact
pertinent
to
the
play
as
a
whole.
In
the
‘body’
part
of
the
essay,
students
should
identify
and
comment
on
relevant
aspects
of
language
used
by
Iago
and
Roderigo
that
reveal
subtle
hints
not
only
about
their
intentions
but
also
about
themselves.
Furthermore,
students
should
also
explore
the
highly
figurative
language
with
which
Iago
manages
to
explain
his
theories
on
‘virtue’
to
Roderigo.
In
the
extract,
Roderigo
claims
to
be
impaired
by
his
emotional
fondness
and
that
he
does
not
have
the
‘virtue’
to
be
able
to
control
his
despair
at
having
lost
all
hope
of
ever
having
Desdemona.
This
scene
follows
the
event
at
the
Duke’s
council
chamber
where
Othello
and
Desdemona
have
now
professed
their
love
towards
each
other
following
their
secretive
elopement.
Roderigo
is
so
desperate
that
he
pledges
to
drown
himself.
Along
with
the
various
roles
that
he
will
eventually
take
on,
Iago
now
assumes
the
role
of
a
‘mentor’
to
Roderigo,
comforting
him
whilst
consistently
urging
him
to
‘put
money’
in
his
purse.
It
is
clear
that
at
this
stage,
Iago
still
needs
a
dupe
like
Roderigo,
not
only
to
have
unlimited
access
to
his
‘purse’,
but
to
be
an
instrumental
part
of
the
plot
that
he
is
hatching.
Speaking
in
plain
prose
to
reveal
his
‘plainness’
and
his
‘honesty’,
Iago
initial
part
of
his
speech
to
Roderigo
is
an
extended
metaphor
where
the
body
is
compared
to
a
garden
which
allows
its
guardian
to
reap
what
he
sows
in
it.
Reference
should
be
made
to
words
like
“gardens”,
”
plant
nettles”,
“sow
lettuce”,
“set
hyssop”
“weed
thyme”,
“herbs”
and
“manure”.
This
highly
figurative
prose
form,
though
limited
in
qualities
of
public
rhetoric,
may
be
considered
as
another
intellectual
quality
in
Iago
since
he
manages
to
persuade
others
through
his
vivid
comparisons.
Students
could
perhaps
make
reference
to
previous
instances
where
Iago
makes
use
of
imagery
(Bestial
animal
imagery).
Iago
also
distinguishes
between
reason
and
emotion
and
asserts
that
reason
must
reign
over
passion
(“sensuality”,
“the
blood
and
baseness
of
our
natures”,
“our
raging
motions”,
“our
carnal
stings”,
“our
unbitten
lusts”)
and
emotion.
In
his
speech,
Iago
succeeds
in
rendering
a
very
complex
philosophical
ideology
palatable
and
understandable
to
Roderigo
who
is
clearly
no
intellectual
match
to
Iago.
Students
should
link
the
thematic
significance
of
this
speech
to
the
way
the
play
will
eventually
unfold.
They
should
note
how
Iago
will
take
advantage
of
his
own
virtue;
his
will,
and
eventually
use
and
abuse
others
for
his
own
advantage
and
‘sport’.
Students
might
also
be
guided
into
understanding
that
dangers
of
the
ideologies
that
Iago
has
put
forward.
It
is
clear
that
Iago
will
prove
his
abilities
to
all
by
overcoming
the
‘better
qualities
of
others,
particularly
that
of
the
noble
Moor
Othello.
This
extract
clearly
highlights
Iago’s
obsession
with
himself
and
his
absolute
lack
of
respect
towards
others.