Julius CaesarPenguin UK, 07.04.2005 - 272 Seiten 'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
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... Romans by the Greek writer Plutarch, finely translated into English from the French by Sir Thomas North in 1579, provided much of the narrative material, and also a mass of verbal detail, for his plays about Roman history. Some plays ...
... Roman texts and towards literature written in English, Shakespeare became the object of intensive study in schools and universities. In the theatre, important turning points were the work in England of two theatre directors, William ...
... Roman people with their rhetoric. Brutus the conspirator and Caesar the ruler whom he helps to assassinate both understand that, in politics, a course of action cannot simply stand on its own merits: a statesman must, in Brutus' words ...
... Roman religion, which is why Brutus can imagine that the conspirators might be seen as sacrificers rather than butchers; but does he really expect either metaphor to predominate in the public mind over the visible actuality of a bloody.
... Romans, countrymen' (III.2.74) – has the reputation of being a theatrical catch-22. There are, it is said, two ... Roman citizens living in 44 BC, so the outcome of events holds no direct, personal significance for us: for us, it's ...