Julius Caesar and Its SourceInst. f. Anglistik u. Amerikanistik, Univ. Salzburg, 1979 - 129 pàgines |
Des de l'interior del llibre
Resultats 1 - 3 de 20.
Pàgina 2
... murder of Tiberius Gracchus in 133 BC , had been in an almost continuous state of civil strife . The Numidian prince Jugurtha called Rome " a city for sale and ready for destruction if it but find a buyer . " In less than a century it ...
... murder of Tiberius Gracchus in 133 BC , had been in an almost continuous state of civil strife . The Numidian prince Jugurtha called Rome " a city for sale and ready for destruction if it but find a buyer . " In less than a century it ...
Pàgina 20
... murder was a catastrophe for the Roman state . notes Caesar's qualities , but enumerates his crimes , which to some extent drove conservative senators to plot and carry out his murder . In other words , Plutarch partially justifies the ...
... murder was a catastrophe for the Roman state . notes Caesar's qualities , but enumerates his crimes , which to some extent drove conservative senators to plot and carry out his murder . In other words , Plutarch partially justifies the ...
Pàgina 74
... murder of their hero is clearly no simple matter . How does Brutus achieve it ? He begins by subtly , unobtrusively , flattering his audience . The very fact that he does not talk down to them , will not speak their language , as Antony ...
... murder of their hero is clearly no simple matter . How does Brutus achieve it ? He begins by subtly , unobtrusively , flattering his audience . The very fact that he does not talk down to them , will not speak their language , as Antony ...
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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