The Man Shakespeare And His Tragic Life-Story

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— One more, and this the last.
So sweet was ne'er so fatal. I must weep.
But they are cruel tears ; this sorrow's heavenly ; It strikes where it doth love. — She wakes." So gentle a murderer was never seen save Mac- beth, and the " heavenly sorrow " that strikes where it doth love is one of the best examples in literature of the Englishman's capacity for hypocritical self- deception. The subsequent dialogue shows us in Othello the short, plain phrases of immitigable reso- lution ; in this scene
... Shakespeare comes nearer to realizing strength than anywhere else in all his work.
But even here his nature shows itself; Othello has to be misled by Desdemona's w^eeping, which he takes to be sorrow for Cassio's death, before he can pass to action, and as soon as the murder is accom- plished, he regrets : " O, insupportable ! O heavy hour ! " His frank avowal, however, is excellently char- acteristic of the soldier Othello : " 'Twas I that killed her." A moment later there is a perfect poetic expres- sion of his love: *' Nay, had she been true If Heaven would make me such another world Of one entire and perfect chrysolite, I'd not have sold her for it." Then comes a revelation of sensualit}^ and physical 285 The Man Shakespeare fastidiousness so peculiar that by itself it proves much of what I have said of Shakespeare : " 0th.


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