Julius CaesarPenguin Group USA, Incorporated, 1963 "The First Folio of 1623 is the definitive edition of Shakespeare's plays. It is more often than not the closest we can now get to what Shakespeare actually wrote. But the Folio's antiquated typography and cramped layout make it remote and inaccessible to modern eyes. The Shakespeare Folios on the other hand offer easy access directly to the First Folio by presenting the text in modern type but otherwise unchanged. All the First Folio's idiosyncrasies of layout and spelling, even its obvious errors, have been scrupulously left intact, but the text suddenly becomes as easily legible as the script of any modern play." "As an additional aid to understanding, readers will find, printed opposite each page of the Folio, the very same passage in a modern edition. So, whenever the Folio presents a problem, the reader can refer to this parallel text for a solution, either in the text itself or in the set of notes at the end of the book. These notes draw on the long tradition of Shakespearean scholarship and include full reference to surviving Quarto texts."--BOOK JACKET. |
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Seite xvii
... called the First Folio . ( A folio is a volume consisting of sheets that have been folded once , each sheet thus making two leaves , or four pages . The eighteen plays published during Shakespeare's lifetime had been issued one play per ...
... called the First Folio . ( A folio is a volume consisting of sheets that have been folded once , each sheet thus making two leaves , or four pages . The eighteen plays published during Shakespeare's lifetime had been issued one play per ...
Seite 141
... called him king . But the people being offended , and Caesar also angry , he said he was not called king , but Caesar . Then every man keeping silence , he went his way heavy and sorrowful . When they had decreed divers honors for him ...
... called him king . But the people being offended , and Caesar also angry , he said he was not called king , but Caesar . Then every man keeping silence , he went his way heavy and sorrowful . When they had decreed divers honors for him ...
Seite 156
... called Cinna , would have spoken , and began to accuse Caesar , they fell into a great uproar among them , and marvelously reviled him ; insomuch that the conspirators returned again into the Capitol . There Brutus , being afraid to be ...
... called Cinna , would have spoken , and began to accuse Caesar , they fell into a great uproar among them , and marvelously reviled him ; insomuch that the conspirators returned again into the Capitol . There Brutus , being afraid to be ...
Inhalt
PREFATORY REMARKS | vii |
INTRODUCTION | xxi |
The Tragedy of Julius Caesar | 33 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Antony's Artemidorus assassination battle bear blood body Brutus and Cassius Caius Calphurnia camp Capitol Casca Cassius Cato character Cicero Cinna Clitus conspiracy conspirators critics crown danger Dardanius dead death Decius doth Dover Wilson Elizabethan enemies Enter Brutus Exeunt Exit fear fell fire Flavius Folio follow Fourth Plebeian friends give gods hand hath hear heart honor ides of March Julius Caesar kill Lepidus liberty Ligarius live London look lord Lucilius Lucius MacCallum Marcus Brutus Mark Antony Marullus matter Messala Metellus Cimber murder night noble Octavius oration Philippi Pindarus play Plutarch political Pompey Pompey's Portia pulpit Roman Rome scene Second Plebeian Senate Servant Shake Shakespeare sick slain soldiers Soothsayer speak speech spirit of Caesar stage stand Strato sword tell theater thee things Third Plebeian thou art Titinius Trebonius unto Volumnius William Shakespeare words York
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