Symbols
The Handkerchief
The handkerchief symbolizes different things to different characters. Since
the handkerchief was the first gift Desdemona received from Othello, she keeps
it about her constantly as a symbol of Othello’s love. Iago manipulates the
handkerchief so that Othello comes to see it as a symbol of Desdemona
herself—her faith and chastity. By taking possession of it, he is able to
convert it into evidence of her infidelity. But the handkerchief’s importance
to Iago and Desdemona derives from its importance to Othello himself. He tells
Desdemona that it was woven by a
200-year-old
sibyl, or female prophet, using silk from sacred worms and dye extracted from
the hearts of mummified virgins. Othello claims that his mother used it to keep
his father faithful to her, so, to him, the handkerchief represents marital
fidelity. 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.
The Song “Willow”
As she prepares for bed in Act V, Desdemona sings a song about a woman who
is betrayed by her lover. She was taught the song by her mother’s maid, Barbary, who suffered a misfortune similar to that of the
woman in the song; she even died singing “Willow.” The song’s lyrics suggest
that both men and women are unfaithful to one another. To Desdemona, the song
seems to represent a melancholy and resigned acceptance of her alienation from
Othello’s affections, and singing it leads her to question Emilia about the
nature and practice of infidelity.
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