Julius CaesarPenguin UK, 07.04.2005 - 272 Seiten 'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
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... scene, 'Caesar did never wrong but with just cause'. The line appears in the published text as 'Know, Caesar doth not wrong, nor without cause | Will he be satisfied' (III.1.47–8), and the anomaly is sometimes explained as a sheepish ...
... scene: Though now we must appear bloody and cruel, As by our hands and this our present act You see we do, yet see you but our hands And this the bleeding business they have done. Our hearts you see not; they are pitiful; And pity to ...
... scene work differently, and have a peculiar effect. In the theatre they are often addressed as much to the auditorium as they are to the onstage crowd – appropriately enough since, as we shall see, the play itself is doing something ...
... scene develops it becomes clear, as most playgoers must always really have known, that Flavius is a tribune from ancient history trying to send Roman revellers home; but it is uses important that the play also begins with a momentary.
... scene, when Cassius is first trying to persuade Brutus to join the conspiracy. He does it by appealing to Rome's history, and the part played in it by Brutus' famous ancestor, Lucius Junius Brutus, who expelled the city's kings in 510 ...