Julius Caesar and Its SourceInst. f. Anglistik u. Amerikanistik, Univ. Salzburg, 1979 - 129 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 18.
Pàgina 32
... later . For this reason , whatever impression we are given of the two in this scene is likely to influence our interpretation of their later words and actions . The background of their previous relationship is detailed in Plutarch : Now ...
... later . For this reason , whatever impression we are given of the two in this scene is likely to influence our interpretation of their later words and actions . The background of their previous relationship is detailed in Plutarch : Now ...
Pàgina 57
... Later Brutus says to the conspirators : No , not an oath . If not the face of men , The sufferance of our souls , the time's abuse- If these be motives weak , break off betimes , And every man hence to his idle bed . So let high ...
... Later Brutus says to the conspirators : No , not an oath . If not the face of men , The sufferance of our souls , the time's abuse- If these be motives weak , break off betimes , And every man hence to his idle bed . So let high ...
Pàgina 62
... later passage : Now at the first time , when the murder was newly done , there were sudden outcries of people that ran up and down the city ; the which indeed did the more increase the fear and tumult . But when they saw they slew no ...
... later passage : Now at the first time , when the murder was newly done , there were sudden outcries of people that ran up and down the city ; the which indeed did the more increase the fear and tumult . But when they saw they slew no ...
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accuse action angry Antony argument audience battle bear better blood Brutus and Cassius Brutus answers Brutus knows Brutus says Caesar's death Caesar's friends Caius Calphurnia Casca Cassius gives Cato cause character choleric Cicero Cinna condemn'd conspiracy conspirators danger dead Decius denied Brutus drachmas dramatic dramatist enemies extortion fact Faonius faults fear follow funeral ghost grief hand heart hero honour ides of March imagine incident Julius Caesar kill Caesar knows Cassius Ligarius Lucius Pella Lupercal Marcus Brutus Mark Antony means Messala mind moral murder never noble Brutus Octavius once oration passage Philippi play Plutarch Plutarch's Brutus poet political Pompey populace Portia Portia's death Praetorship quarrel scene reason Roman Rome Sardis Schanzer self-delusion Senate Shakespeare Shakespeare's Brutus Shakespeare's Caesar show Brutus soldiers soliloquy speak spirit statement stoicism tell tent thou thought thrasonically Titinius true tyranny tyrant unto vile wants words wrong