Julius CaesarLongmans, Green, 1911 - 161 Seiten |
Im Buch
Ergebnisse 1-5 von 28
Seite v
... once and for all . The aim of this edition , as is stated elsewhere , is to help the young student in his first serious reading of a Shaksperian drama . For this student the introduction and the notes were prepared , and for his sake ...
... once and for all . The aim of this edition , as is stated elsewhere , is to help the young student in his first serious reading of a Shaksperian drama . For this student the introduction and the notes were prepared , and for his sake ...
Seite x
... once to have been a slayer of cattle . " When he killed a calf , " Aubrey quaintly tells us , " he would do it in a high style and make a speech . " In 1582 , in spite of the distresses of his father , Shak- spere married Anne Hathaway ...
... once to have been a slayer of cattle . " When he killed a calf , " Aubrey quaintly tells us , " he would do it in a high style and make a speech . " In 1582 , in spite of the distresses of his father , Shak- spere married Anne Hathaway ...
Seite xi
... once with the princely gift of £ 1,000 . Moreover , his profits from the theatre were large . He is known to have bought one house in London . Nevertheless his thoughts were ever turning toward his native town . He longed most for the ...
... once with the princely gift of £ 1,000 . Moreover , his profits from the theatre were large . He is known to have bought one house in London . Nevertheless his thoughts were ever turning toward his native town . He longed most for the ...
Seite xxvi
... once command attention . A second and more telling stricture is the faulty char- acterisation Shakspere has given of the great conqueror of antiquity . Cæsar lives in the play as a mere grandilo- quent boaster and braggart . His nature ...
... once command attention . A second and more telling stricture is the faulty char- acterisation Shakspere has given of the great conqueror of antiquity . Cæsar lives in the play as a mere grandilo- quent boaster and braggart . His nature ...
Seite xxviii
... once be- come accustomed to : ( 1 ) Shakspere's rather free syntax ; ( 2 ) his unhampered use of words ; and ( 3 ) his large and unrestrained manner of expressing thought . A discussion of these three subjects will help the young ...
... once be- come accustomed to : ( 1 ) Shakspere's rather free syntax ; ( 2 ) his unhampered use of words ; and ( 3 ) his large and unrestrained manner of expressing thought . A discussion of these three subjects will help the young ...
Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
adjective Antony's ARTEMIDORUS battle bear blood Brutus and Cassius Caius Calpurnia Capitol CASCA Cassius Cato CESAR character Cicero Cimber CINNA CLITUS common Compare conspirators Coriolanus death Decius Brutus doth Edited Elizabethan enemy Enter BRUTUS Exeunt Exit fear fire Flavius Folio reads follow FOURTH CITIZEN friends funeral give gods grief Hamlet hand hast hath hear heart honour ides of March Introduction Julius Cæsar King Lepidus Ligarius look lord LUCILIUS Lucius Marcus Brutus Mark Antony MARULLUS means Merchant of Venice MESSALA Metellus mov'd night North's Plutarch Octavius omission Philippi Pindarus play Plutarch poet Pompey's Portia Professor of English Publius Roman Rome scene SECOND CITIZEN SERVANT Shak Shakspere Shakspere's day Shaksperian Skeat SOOTHSAYER speak speech spere spirit stand Strato sword tell theatre thee things THIRD CITIZEN Tiber tion Titinius to-day TREBONIUS Troilus and Cressida unto verb verse Volumnius words