King Lear
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Othello's epilepsy
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by
Lance
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Jun 29, 2013 04:46PM

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If I recall correctly, he doesn't strangle Desdamona during a seizure, but later after he's recovered. How is this demonstrating incompetence and inability to be responsible for his actions?
Her actual line is "And yet I fear you; for you’re fatal then when your eyes roll so." I always took that to mean that watching his seizures made her think he was dying when he had one. (They are pretty awful to watch!) He wasn't seizing at this point, he was strangling her in a fit of jealous rage.
I think a lawyer wouldn't have much luck getting him acquitted of murder in this case.


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