Comparing the use of jealousy in Shakespeare's, Othello, and Elizabeth Cary's The Tragedy of Mariam.
- Words:
- 1596
- Submitted:
- Mon Feb 16 2004

Have a little read: ... In Shakespeare's, Othello, and Elizabeth Cary's The Tragedy of Mariam, although jealousy consumes Othello and Herod, and death is the end result for their wives Desdemona and Mariam, this jealousy would not have been a major factor had it not been provoked by other people, who, in these cases, are the characters Iago and Salome. Iago and Salome manage to turn Othello and Herod from loving husbands, to husbands who are so consumed with jealousy that they wrongly put their wives to death. Though Iago and Salome provoke Othello and Herod for entirely different reasons, the end result is the same; the men come to believe that their wives are unfaithful, therefore deserving to die. The similarities and differences in the types of lies in which Iago and Salome use to provoke the two men into believing their wives infidelities will be explored, and how these lies go
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