LEC052017. DEEPTHI M . CRITICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE HANDKERCHIEF IN OTHELLO
Deepthi M
Dr. Joseph Koyippally
LEC5104
13 January 2021
CRITICAL SIGNIFICANCE OF THE HANDKERCHIEF IN OTHELLO
One of the devices that
often a Shakespearean play uses is a love token to show confinement in a
relationship and the possession of one individual by another. Likewise, in Othello,
the handkerchief presented by Othello to Desdemona symbolically represents
their marriage bond itself. Initially, it was
given to Desdemona by Othello as a token of their love. Subsequently, it is
symbolically transformed into Desdemona’s bedsheets which she requests to be
used to cover her as a death shroud. Othello connects the image of entrapment
to the handkerchief when he says: “There is a magic in the web of it.”
((III.iv.69, emphasis added). For him, the handkerchief represents marital fidelity.
He believes that his wife is faithful as long as the token remains in her
possession and hence place excessive weight upon the token and fails to notice
the true love of his beloved. In Act III, Scene iv, while describing the origin
of the handkerchief, Othello discloses this conditional love he feels for
Desdemona. He implies that something ominous will happen if the handkerchief is
lost (67-68). Shakespeare further reinforces the idea of entrapment through
Iago’s language. In Act II, scene, Iago speaks
metaphorically of himself as the spider who will spin a web that will entrap Cassio:
“With as little a web as this will, I ensnare as great a fly as
Cassio”(169-170). Hence instead of mere
representing love, the handkerchief becomes a definitive test of love.
Apart
from fidelity, Othello associates the handkerchief with magic, myth and his own
past. In describing the origin
of the handkerchief, Othello tells Desdemona that an Egyptian gave it to his
mother, and before his mother’s death, she gave it to him. He says that the
Egyptian told his mother that:
while she kept it
T’ would make her amiable
and subdue my father
Entirely to her love, but
if she lost it
Or made a gift of it, my
father’s eye
Should hold her loathed
and his spirits should hunt
After new fancies
(III.iv.58-63)
Thus, Othello’s mythic
perception of marriage is emphasized as he states that the handkerchief has the
power to “subdue” his father. Othello has essentially laid the foundation of
his own trap by creating an unrealistic belief in the powers of an inanimate
object and imposing this belief on Desdemona. This is why, Stephen suggests, “Homer’s Odyssey, in a passage relating Helen
of Troy’s surreptitiously giving a drug to her husband and to Telemachus,
appears to be a major source for William Shakespeare’s description in Othello
(1603– 4) of the handkerchief given to Desdemona, which ultimately leads to
her murder”. The magic which Othello associate with the handkerchief has a
foreboding quality as he uses images associated with the grotesque to describe
the origins of the handkerchief: “worms were hallowed,” “dyed in mummy” and “conserved
of maidens’ hearts” (III.iv.73-75).
The paradox that exists within
the handkerchief, perverse purity within the design, is also present in
Othello’s estimation of Desdemona. Either she is completely pure and innocent,
associated with “white” as he calls her a “sweet Desdemona,” or she is
passionate and lustful, associated with “red,” as he later calls her a
“strumpet.” Boose associates the strawberry with virginity as she explains that
Elizabethan gardeners considered the strawberry as the purest of fruits for “the
treble-leafed strawberry plant bore a red fruit from its initially white flower.
Furthermore, the plant itself was part of the generic rose family, the flower
most frequently associated with love and desire” (362). These associations of
the strawberry with the Virgin and virginity reinforce the sublime view Othello
holds of Desdemona. Boose contends that Shakespeare depends on the audience to
be familiar with an age-old custom of publicly displaying the stained wedding
sheets as evidence of the consummated marriage (363). The pattern of
strawberries (dyed with virgins’ blood) on a white background strongly suggests
the bloodstains left on the sheets on a virgin’s wedding night, so the
handkerchief implicitly suggests a guarantee of virginity as well as fidelity. Othello perceives that
Desdemona is chaste if she is in possession of the handkerchief. Once she loses
it, she loses her chastity.
Throughout
Othello, the handkerchief is “handled” by almost every character, which reflects
a significant problem existing within the marriage. A number of characters are involved in the couple’s relationship,
thereby interrupting effective communication between the couple to a fatal
extent. The handkerchief was Othello's first gift to Desdemona, and that she
always keeps it with her, “To kiss
and talk to” (3.3.296). The
handkerchief is first referred to when Desdemona offers it to Othello and he
rejects it in Act III, scene iii. Robert
Heilman suggests that, when Othello rejects Desdemona’s offer of the handkerchief,
he “rejects the magical powers of love” (213). Emilia picks up the handkerchief
to give it to her husband Iago who pleaded for it many times for his motiveless
malignity. (Coleridge Lectures 1808-1819 On Literature 2: 315).
As the handkerchief is passed from one person to the next, the division between
Othello and Desdemona grows wider. Because Othello views the handkerchief as a
symbol of Desdemona’s fidelity, in a sense, each time it is “handled,”
Desdemona’s purity diminishes in Othello’s estimation. In Othello, Shakespeare calls into question the sanctity of marriage and explores
the various manipulations and expectations that characters impose upon each
other.
The handkerchief
may appear to be an insignificant object, but throughout the play, the way its
symbolic importance is revealed shows that it is really very significant. As the handkerchief undergoes various symbolic
transformations, its significance becomes more alarming. To a great extent, the
tragedy of Othello is put into motion by this seemingly insignificant object. Edward Snow sees the contradiction of the love token as he suggests
that the story Othello narrates to Desdemona about the handkerchief “entangles
the erotic impulses on filial relationships, and brings to the fore just those
anxieties which such a ‘recognizance and pledge of love’ is intended to dispel”
(403). Othello’s obsession with the
handkerchief brings about his tragic end.
”
Works Cited
Primary
source
Shakespeare,
William. Othello.Dover publications (2016).
Secondary
sources
Boose,
Lynda. “Othello’s Handkerchief: ‘The Recognition and Pledge of Love.’”
English
Literary Renaissance 5 (1975): 360-374.
Coleridge,
Samuel. “Lectures 1808- 1819 On
Literature.”
www.jstor.org/stable/438254?seq=1 Accessed on
13 Jan2021
Kirsch,
Arthur. “The Polarization of Erotic Love in Othello.” The Modern
Language
Review
73
(1978): 721-740.
pdfs.semanticscholar.org/faab/86130055468747c77d6f50d2b5826c48af97.pdf.
Accessed
on 11 Jan 2021
Rojcewicz,
Stephen. “There’s Magic in the Web of It”: Othello’s
Handkerchief and Helen of Troy’s Drug.” Delos:
A Journal of Translation and World Literature,2019
www.academia.edu/41265191/_Theres_Magic_in_the_Web_of_It_Othellos_Handkerchief_and_Helen_of_Troys_Drug Accessed on 12 Jan 2021
Smith,
Ayan.“Othello's Black Handkerchief.”Shakespeare
Quarterly,Vol 64,issue no.1,2013,
1-25
www.jstor.org/stable/24778431?seq=1 Accessed on 12 Jan 2021
Snow,
Edward. “Sexual Anxiety and the Male Order of Things in Othello.” English
Literary
Renaissance 10 (1980): 384-412
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/j.1475-6757.1980.tb00722.x
Accessed
on 13 Jan2021
The first paragraph of the essay should have focused solely on putting forth a strong hypothesis. The lack of an original hypothesis renders the rest of the essay incoherent.
ReplyDeleteAlso, citations provided in the writing does not entirely conform to the MLA 8 style sheet.
A point to prove would have propelled the essay better.
The Introductory paragraph is too long and failed to put forth the hypothesis. Some quotes were not properly cited. Some points were irrelevant to tell topic and some paragraphs were copied from the sources noted.
ReplyDeleteSince the introductory paragraph is too lengthy it is a difficult task to identityfy the hypothesis.
ReplyDeleteSome paragraphs seem to deviate from the hypothesis, i.e lot of ideas are put together in a single paragraph. There should be more focus on better transition between two paragraphs.
ReplyDeleteGood attempt.The first paragraph is too lengthy and it is failed to put forward a strong hypothesis. Different ideas can be seen in a single paragraph, it would be better to separate the paragraphs according to the main points. Some citations are not as per the MLA style sheet.
ReplyDelete