Julius CaesarPenguin UK, 07.04.2005 - 272 Seiten 'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
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... Lives of the Noble Grecians and 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 ...
... live performance there is always an atmosphere of pleasurable anticipation among the assembled playgoers, which reaches its height as the actors come onstage and begin the play. But the first thing to be said in this play is an order to ...
... lives of its audience. Such commonplace things as books or striking clocks can simply be taken for granted unless you have made a study of when they happen to have been invented; what an audience will notice are the ways in which the ...
... Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans, in which he read a straightforward assertion that the two tribunes were removed from oce. But in writing his own version of the event, he introduced a sinister ambiguity: 'put to silence' can be ...
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