William Shakespeare creates a detailed description of the misrepresentation through a characters usage of dialog. The hypocrisy of a person’s persona can be demeaning due to the presence kept hidden for unknown reasons. Even with the little white lies of orders that have been given, such as Othello giving orders to kill, “Honest Iago hath ta’en …show more content…
The deceit that one individual can create can unman even the most honorable of men. The deceiver, like Iago, has many sides so they are able to generate the outcome that they strive for. “The first gives us a view of Iago which if to be proved superficial, is yet a true one and a sample of a double-dealing” (Granville-Barker 489). Just as such for an imposer, the need to keep creating madness allows for a much more tangled web. “Othello does at first put up a feeble intellectual resistance, in a single soliloquy he struggles a little with himself; but, after this, every defence is swept away, and the poison rages in him unchecked” (Granville-Barker 492). The need to create even the upmost smallest of lies allows personal gratification to come to life, illustrated as, “I told him what I thought” (Shakespeare 5.2.176). Even with Iago using the smallest of manipulation, he can create uproar of emotions within his victims. “Of vanity, envy, self-seeking and distrust, which are the seeds of jealousy in general, Othello, insisted from the beginning, is notably free, so free that he …show more content…
The proper use of wording one can manipulate another into just about anything that they deem fit. By doing so it can lead them into disregarding their own feelings and put in place the emotions of others. Due to this change it can allow the antagonist to become power hungry and allow greed to take over. Allowing an individual to take charge of the free will of others only creates and lets chaos takeover in even the most avoidable of