Othello's hero Virtue William Shakespeare's tragedy Othello shows obvious heroes and other less obvious heroes. Let's examine them comprehensively in this article. The most advanced hero in the play did not happen to the dramatist overnight. Instead, he established the hero one after another in the drama until his work reached the climax of the Moor. A. C. Bradley explains the development of Othello's Shakespeare Superhero in his literary critique "The tragedy of Shakespeare": With this change in change the hero's physique will expand.
Othello Cello - a book on the hero and tragic hero in the play. As a Moore in the Venetian army, he is a famous general and a hero, and his "free and open character" will transform Iaigo into a strong embarrassment of his love for his wife Deademona. Desdemona - Senator Venezia's daughter, and Othello's bride. The most thoughtful person in the drama, she loves her husband deeply, her purity is strongly contrasted with evil of Iago. Iago-Othello
The drama began when Venice 's heroic black officer Othello appointed Cassio as his main aide instead of Iago. Othello, Ikasio, Iago 's success explained Othello' s fall by mistakenly suggesting the love of Othello 's wife Dedemona and Casio. With the help of Emilia, his wife, and dissatisfied Rodrigo, I am performing his plan. When Odello dropped it unconsciously with the handkerchief of Dedemona and the handkerchief found by Emilia, Iago convinced Odello that Dedemona handed handkerchief to Casio as a symbol of love. Iago also invited Othello to talk to Cassio, actually talking about Cassio's mistress Bianca, but Othello was led to believe that Cassio is obsessed with Desdemona.
In William Shakespeare 's play' Othello ', heroic Othello was betrayed by his own flag and hand, best friend, dangerous Iago. As one of the most famous opponents in literature, Iago was destroying Othello and his wife, Desdemona, for unknown reasons. I misrepresed Othello and believed that Deademona, who was always faithful, had cheated on him, and ultimately persuaded him to kill her. In Robert Louis Stevenson's 1886 classic novel "Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde's strange case", Dr. Jekyll is the hero and Mr. Hide is the opponent. Stevenson painted the dominance battle between "Angels" and "Devils" he claimed, by drawing a ruthless and unpredictable change of Mr. Hyde, Mr. Jekyll's murderer.