Love In Othello Quotes & Sayings
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Top Love In Othello Quotes

Corlda looked at them both in sheer terror her eyes where firmly fixed on the camera "Agres..." she stammered Agres stopped tending to Tria and joined her. — Charon Lloyd-Roberts

Excellent wretch! Perdition catch my soul But I do love thee! and when I love thee not, Chaos is come again. — William Shakespeare

I followed the course
From chaos to art
Desire the horse
Depression the cart — Leonard Cohen

It does not matter where you come from, if you walk toward the truth you will reach it, whatever path you take. — Neil Gaiman

When We Share ... We Show The Universe That We Truly Care — Timothy Pina

Othello is about many different kinds of love: it's about the light, beautiful side of love, and it's about the twisted, darker side of love, and it's about how, if you flip the emotional coin, love can make you do terrible things. (James Earl Jones) — Susannah Carson

When I see something I end up making a song about it and that's the way it is. There have been plenty of times when I've been in the studio and they were like, "Hey, why don't you make a song about such and such," and I just can't. I've gotta have it in my heart. — Amanda Perez

I'm quite sure Shakespeare enjoyed writing Iago much more than he did writing Othello. If you write about someone you love, what the hell are you supposed to say about that person? It's much better to have something between you and your main character that grates. — Henning Mankell

If the distinction is not held too rigidly nor pressed too far, it is interesting to think of Shakespeare's chief works as either love dramas or power dramas, or a combination of the two. In his Histories, the poet handles the power problem primarily, the love interest being decidedly incidental. In the Comedies, it is the other way around, overwhelmingly in the lighter ones, distinctly in the graver ones, except in Troilus and Cressida
hardly comedy at all
where without full integration something like a balance is maintained. In the Tragedies both interests are important, but Othello is decidedly a love drama and Macbeth as clearly a power drama, while in Hamlet and King Lear the two interests often alternate rather than blend. — Harold Clarke Goddard

When the well is dry, we know the worth of water. — Benjamin Franklin

No one warned you that having children reduced you right down to some smaller, rudimentary, primitive version of yourself, where your talents and your education and your achievements meant nothing. Clementine — Liane Moriarty

A character I would love to play is Iago, from Othello. — Tim Roth

I didn't want to read French or write it; it was like a boycott, a rejection. — Etel Adnan

Fame is fickle. If the media turn against me, I will just have more time in the library. Not bad as a fate. — Mary Beard

I do not understand! I understand nothing! I cannot understand nor do I want to understand! I want to believe! To Believe! — Jean-Paul Sartre

The word "jealousy" is often used as if it were synonymous with envy; but I think the distinction worth preserving. Jealousy is predominantly concerned with the fear of loss of something one possesses, envy with the wish to own something another possesses. Othello suffers from the fear that he has lost Desdemona's love. Iago suffers from envy of the position held by Cassio, to which he feels entitled. — Anthony Storr