Julius CaesarWorld Book Company, 1913 - 115 Seiten |
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Seite vii
... heart of England , " was filled with the choicest rural and woodland scenery . The thickly wooded portion of the county north of the river Avon was called Arden . South of the lovely Avon meadows were rich pasture lands . Stratford ...
... heart of England , " was filled with the choicest rural and woodland scenery . The thickly wooded portion of the county north of the river Avon was called Arden . South of the lovely Avon meadows were rich pasture lands . Stratford ...
Seite xxx
... hearts of controversy , " adds little to the thought . The long and explicit close is a good specimen of the rhetorical largeness which delights us in this play : " I , as Æneas our great ancestor : - Did from the flames of Troy upon ...
... hearts of controversy , " adds little to the thought . The long and explicit close is a good specimen of the rhetorical largeness which delights us in this play : " I , as Æneas our great ancestor : - Did from the flames of Troy upon ...
Seite xxxiv
... heart in the animal sacri- ficed , Calpurnia's dream ; the peculiar traits of Cæsar's char- acter , his superstition regarding the touch of barren women in the course , and his remarks about thin people like Cassius ; all the ...
... heart in the animal sacri- ficed , Calpurnia's dream ; the peculiar traits of Cæsar's char- acter , his superstition regarding the touch of barren women in the course , and his remarks about thin people like Cassius ; all the ...
Seite xxxvi
... hearts more than do the characters of any other poet . But this depth is sometimes unfathomable to the eyes of the artist - actor even as it is to the auditor ; and the characters of this poet are by no means always so transparent and ...
... hearts more than do the characters of any other poet . But this depth is sometimes unfathomable to the eyes of the artist - actor even as it is to the auditor ; and the characters of this poet are by no means always so transparent and ...
Seite xl
... heart " in this unrestrained fashion . " The noblest Roman of them all " lives a reserved , self - controlled , high - minded life ; and his dying thought is , - " My heart doth joy that yet in all my life I found no man but he was true ...
... heart " in this unrestrained fashion . " The noblest Roman of them all " lives a reserved , self - controlled , high - minded life ; and his dying thought is , - " My heart doth joy that yet in all my life I found no man but he was true ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjective Artemidorus back stage battle bear blood Brutus and Cassius Brutus's Cade Cæs Caesar Caius called Calpurnia Capitol Casca Cassius Cato character Cicero Cimber Cinna common conspiracy conspirators danger Decius Brutus doth drama Elizabethan enemies English Enter Exeunt Exit fear feast of Lupercal fire Folio Fourth Cit friends funeral give gods hand hath hear heart honour humour ides of March incident Julius Cæsar Lepidus Ligarius look lord Lucilius Lucius Marcus Marcus Brutus Mark Antony market-place meaning Messala Metellus mind night noble Octavius Philippi Pindarus play Plutarch poet Pompey Pompey's Portia present Roman Rome scene seems Senate Shake Shakespeare slain Soothsayer speak speech Strato sword syllable tell theater thee thing Third Cit thou art thought Titinius to-day transferred epithet Trebonius unto verb verse Volumnius William Shakespeare word