Julius CaesarStandard Ebooks After defeating enemies in battle, Roman citizens celebrate in the streets as Julius Caesar and his entourage make their way through the city. As Caesar passes a soothsayer, he receives an ominous warning: “Beware the ides of March,” which he immediately disregards. Meanwhile, some of his closest followers are convinced their leader has become too powerful and plot his removal. Plutarch’s Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans was Shakespeare’s primary source for Julius Caesar. This Standard Ebooks edition is based on William George Clark and William Aldis Wright’s 1887 Victoria edition, which is taken from the Globe edition. This book is part of the Standard Ebooks project, which produces free public domain ebooks. |
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... bear too stubborn and too strange a hand Over your friend that loves you . Cassius , Be not deceived : if I have veil'd my look , I turn the trouble of my countenance Merely upon myself . Vexed I am Of late with passions of some ...
... bear , so from the waves of Tiber Did I the tired Caesar . And this man Is now become a god , and Cassius is A wretched creature and must bend his body , If Caesar carelessly but nod on him . He had a fever when he was in Spain , And ...
... bear me hard ; but he loves Brutus : If I were Brutus now and he were Cassius , He should not humour me . I will this night , In several hands , in at his windows throw , As if they came from several citizens , Writings all tending to ...
... bear I can shake off at pleasure. (Thunder still.) So can I: So every bondman in his own hand bears The power to cancel his captivity. And why should Caesar be a tyrant then? Poor man! I know he would not be a wolf, But that he sees the ...
... bear no colour for the thing he is , Fashion it thus ; that what he is , augmented , Would run to these and these extremities : And therefore think him as a serpent's egg Which , hatch'd , would , as his kind , grow mischievous , And ...