Julius CaesarHoughton Mifflin, 1911 - 110 Seiten |
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Seite iv
... words but ideas that Shakespeare follows , as in the case of the quarrel scene between Cassius and Brutus and the oration of Mark Antony , both of which were obviously suggested by the dramatic accounts of the same incidents in Plutarch ...
... words but ideas that Shakespeare follows , as in the case of the quarrel scene between Cassius and Brutus and the oration of Mark Antony , both of which were obviously suggested by the dramatic accounts of the same incidents in Plutarch ...
Seite viii
... words , and the mob look upon Cæsar as a martyr . Sc . iii . The fury of the mob upon an innocent man presages what may be the end of the conspirators . ACT IV Sc . i . Antony's position at the head of the Roman worid makes sure the ...
... words , and the mob look upon Cæsar as a martyr . Sc . iii . The fury of the mob upon an innocent man presages what may be the end of the conspirators . ACT IV Sc . i . Antony's position at the head of the Roman worid makes sure the ...
Seite xi
... words and phrases , believing that the one study which the reader may most profitably pursue when first reading Shakespeare is that which springs from an attention to the English of Shake- speare . All his additions are indicated by ...
... words and phrases , believing that the one study which the reader may most profitably pursue when first reading Shakespeare is that which springs from an attention to the English of Shake- speare . All his additions are indicated by ...
Seite xii
... public Cæ- sar , par excellence . [ So world - wide did the name become as a syno- nym for chieftainship that even the Slavic races appropriated it . The Russian Czar or Tsar is the same word . ] JULIUS CÆSAR ACT I SCENE I. Rome . A street.
... public Cæ- sar , par excellence . [ So world - wide did the name become as a syno- nym for chieftainship that even the Slavic races appropriated it . The Russian Czar or Tsar is the same word . ] JULIUS CÆSAR ACT I SCENE I. Rome . A street.
Seite 1
... boy , " the German knabe , and in our common use we give the word " boy " the range of two of the meanings of knave . The notion of villain was a remoter third , and is not in Marullus's mind . ] Sec . Com . Nay , I beseech you , II.
... boy , " the German knabe , and in our common use we give the word " boy " the range of two of the meanings of knave . The notion of villain was a remoter third , and is not in Marullus's mind . ] Sec . Com . Nay , I beseech you , II.
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
Alarum Antony's art thou ARTEMIDORUS bear blood Brutus and Cassius Brutus's Cæs Caius Calpurnia Capitol Casca Cassius's Cato ceremonies character Cicero Cinna Clitus Complete Poetical conspirators countrymen Dardanius death Decius Brutus deed dost doth dramatic enemy Enter BRUTUS Exeunt Exit fear feast of Lupercal fire follow Fourth Cit friends Ghost give gods griefs Hamlet hand hath hear heart honour humour ides of March Julius Cæsar Lepidus Ligarius Literature look lord Lucil Lucilius Marcus Brutus Mark Antony mean Messala Metellus Cimber mighty mov'd Nervii night noble Brutus Octavius Philippi Pindarus play Plutarch poet Portia Prose Publius Re-enter LUCIUS Richard Grant White Riverside Roman Rome SCENE senators Shake Shakespeare sick Soothsayer speak speech spirit stand Strato sword tell thee thing Third Cit thou art Titinius to-day to-night Trebonius unto Volumnius word wrong