Julius CaesarPenguin UK, 07.04.2005 - 272 Seiten 'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
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... Flavius (I.1.1). This opening line can have a powerful impact when played to an audience, rather than just to the onstage characters. Before any live performance there is always an atmosphere of pleasurable anticipation among the ...
... Flavius prove eminently dislikeable. They are selfimportant in their assumed superiority as they reprove the onstage crowd for taking an unauthorized holiday. They cannot bear not to have the best of the encounter, and Flavius' bearing ...
... Flavius who briey appears in Brutus' army in Act V, scene 4 need not be the same man; in any event, he is based on a different historical personage.) That's important, because personalities are only one element in the equation, and ...
... Flavius, for pulling scarfs off Caesar's images, are put to silence' (I.2.282–3). Many an editor has glossed this line by quoting Shakespeare's source, Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans, in which he read a ...
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