Julius CaesarLongmans, Green, 1911 - 161 Seiten |
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Seite xix
... words of Brutus : " Countrymen , My heart doth joy that yet in all my life I found no man but he was true to me . I shall have glory by this losing day More than Octavius and Mark Antony By this vile conquest shall attain unto . " Yet ...
... words of Brutus : " Countrymen , My heart doth joy that yet in all my life I found no man but he was true to me . I shall have glory by this losing day More than Octavius and Mark Antony By this vile conquest shall attain unto . " Yet ...
Seite xx
... words in North's Plutarch : " Afterwards , when Cæsar's body was brought into the market - place , Antonius making his funeral ora- tion in praise of the dead , according to the ancient custom of Rome , and perceiving that his words ...
... words in North's Plutarch : " Afterwards , when Cæsar's body was brought into the market - place , Antonius making his funeral ora- tion in praise of the dead , according to the ancient custom of Rome , and perceiving that his words ...
Seite xxi
... words become conjoined in our minds as purely Shaksperian ? Many of the best touches of realism in the play are also found in the history - Cæsar's dislike of lean men , the prodigies preceding Cæsar's death , the battle on Cassius ...
... words become conjoined in our minds as purely Shaksperian ? Many of the best touches of realism in the play are also found in the history - Cæsar's dislike of lean men , the prodigies preceding Cæsar's death , the battle on Cassius ...
Seite xxiv
... word as well as in story ; the verse , like Antony , " speaks right on , " and has no suggestion of the involution and the maze of some of the later , grander plays ; yet who can dispute the harmony and splendour of much of the language ...
... word as well as in story ; the verse , like Antony , " speaks right on , " and has no suggestion of the involution and the maze of some of the later , grander plays ; yet who can dispute the harmony and splendour of much of the language ...
Seite xxviii
... words ; and ( 3 ) his large and unrestrained manner of expressing thought . A discussion of these three subjects will help the young student to understand much that may seem to him odd or inex- plicable in the poet's work . The ...
... words ; and ( 3 ) his large and unrestrained manner of expressing thought . A discussion of these three subjects will help the young student to understand much that may seem to him odd or inex- plicable in the poet's work . The ...
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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