Julius CaesarBurgess & Bowes, 1904 - 252 Seiten |
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Ergebnisse 1-5 von 77
Seite xv
... Rome . Formation of the Triumvirate - Octavius , Antony , Lepidus . ' Proscriptions ' at Rome , in which Cicero falls . Battles of Philippi . March 15 , 44 . March 19 or 20 , 44 . May , 44 . November , 43 . October , 42 . 1 Appian was ...
... Rome . Formation of the Triumvirate - Octavius , Antony , Lepidus . ' Proscriptions ' at Rome , in which Cicero falls . Battles of Philippi . March 15 , 44 . March 19 or 20 , 44 . May , 44 . November , 43 . October , 42 . 1 Appian was ...
Seite xvii
... Rome . The remainder of the play traces their gradual downfall . Cæsar's avengers combine while his murderers disagree in a manner that augurs ill for their cause ; and surely the sense of imminent ruin increases . Their friends at Rome ...
... Rome . The remainder of the play traces their gradual downfall . Cæsar's avengers combine while his murderers disagree in a manner that augurs ill for their cause ; and surely the sense of imminent ruin increases . Their friends at Rome ...
Seite xxii
... Rome . 40 ) . But if he loves Cæsar much he loves Rome more ( III . 2. 23 ) ; and pity for the " general wrong " drives out his pity for Cæsar , even as fire expels fire ( III . 1. 170 , 171 ) . As a Roman- " Rome " and " Roman " are ...
... Rome . 40 ) . But if he loves Cæsar much he loves Rome more ( III . 2. 23 ) ; and pity for the " general wrong " drives out his pity for Cæsar , even as fire expels fire ( III . 1. 170 , 171 ) . As a Roman- " Rome " and " Roman " are ...
Seite xxvii
... Rome : now ( IV 1. 7-9 ) he is anxious to see . whether the will may not be evaded and " some charge in legacies " —these same legacies - be cut off . Again in this interview he shows his cruelty , bartering away the life of his own ...
... Rome : now ( IV 1. 7-9 ) he is anxious to see . whether the will may not be evaded and " some charge in legacies " —these same legacies - be cut off . Again in this interview he shows his cruelty , bartering away the life of his own ...
Seite xxviii
... Rome , his personal love of the people as shown by the will , and the pity of his fate . And a wave of passion sweeps away all the effect of Brutus's words . There is something dazzling about the self - reliance , the courage , the ...
... Rome , his personal love of the people as shown by the will , and the pity of his fate . And a wave of passion sweeps away all the effect of Brutus's words . There is something dazzling about the self - reliance , the courage , the ...
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1st Folio allusion Antony's Artemidorus battle bear blank verse blood Brutus and Cassius Brutus's Caius Calpurnia Capitol Casca Cassius Cato cause character Cicero Cinna Clitus conspiracy conspirators couplet crown danger dead death Decius doth Elizabethan writers enemy English Exeunt Extract fear fire friends funeral give gods Greek grief Hamlet hand hath hear heart hence Henry honour humour ides of March Julius Cæsar King Lear Lepidus Ligarius live look lord Lucilius Lucius Lupercalia Macbeth Mark Antony means Merchant of Venice Messala Metellus Cimber murder night noble North's Plutarch Octavius Paradise Lost Philippi Pindarus play plural Pompey Pompey's Portia Publius rhyme Richard Richard II Roman Rome Rostra Scene Second Citizen Senate sense Shakespeare slain Soothsayer speak speech stand Strato stress sword syllables tell Tempest thee thing Third Citizen Titinius Trebonius unto verb Volumnius word