What documents in the end of the scene 2 does the count of monte cristo prepare and why
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The third scene of the third act of Othello is famous as the 'temptation scene' in Othello, though Iago's temptation of Othello continues up to the first scene of the fourth act.Iago's provocation of Othello's jealousy and anger is referred to as 'temptation' in the sense that it is like the ‘temptation' of Eve by Satan in the form of a snake. Here, 'temptation' is understood in the Christian sense of 'attracting someone towards some evil or danger', rather than in its modern, neutral, non-Christian meaning of 'attracting someone towards something attractive'.
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