The Tragedie of Julius Caesar |
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Page vii
... present - day reader to stumble in reading it . - The advantage of typographical fidelity to the first edition , so long withheld from the public , is obvious , and with no other changes whatever beyond those men- tioned , either in ...
... present - day reader to stumble in reading it . - The advantage of typographical fidelity to the first edition , so long withheld from the public , is obvious , and with no other changes whatever beyond those men- tioned , either in ...
Page xii
... present editors have chosen instead to begin with the light of the original . The nearest way to ' that fair country , the Poet's real habitation , ' they have sought to throw open to the general reader by setting before him , just as ...
... present editors have chosen instead to begin with the light of the original . The nearest way to ' that fair country , the Poet's real habitation , ' they have sought to throw open to the general reader by setting before him , just as ...
Page xiv
... present editors to place before the public faithfully , but in easily readable form . They have sought also to add to it such a systematized apparatus of brief textual foot- notes and copious end - volume notes , together with ...
... present editors to place before the public faithfully , but in easily readable form . They have sought also to add to it such a systematized apparatus of brief textual foot- notes and copious end - volume notes , together with ...
Page xx
... of the people . ' Thence it is that the majestic Ghost of Sardis derives his credentials . 6 Shakespeare presents thus , in Julius Cæsar , ' a period of historic crisis when an old order is passing , XX THE TRAGEDIE OF JULIUS CÆSAR.
... of the people . ' Thence it is that the majestic Ghost of Sardis derives his credentials . 6 Shakespeare presents thus , in Julius Cæsar , ' a period of historic crisis when an old order is passing , XX THE TRAGEDIE OF JULIUS CÆSAR.
Page 13
... present , I would not so ( with love I might intreat you ) Be any further moov'd : What you have said , I will consider : what you have to say 180 I will with patience heare , and finde a time Both meete to heare , and answer such high ...
... present , I would not so ( with love I might intreat you ) Be any further moov'd : What you have said , I will consider : what you have to say 180 I will with patience heare , and finde a time Both meete to heare , and answer such high ...
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Common terms and phrases
2DYCE ANON Antony's Artemidorus beare blood Brut Brutus and Cassius Brutus's Cæsarism Caius Calphurnia Capitoll Casar Cask Caska Cassius Cato cause Cicero Cinna Clitus COLL conspirators CRAIK Crowne death Decius doth Elizabethan enemies Enter Exeunt Exit feare fire flye Folio follow friends generall ghost Gods hand hath heare heart heere Honor Ides of March Julius Cæsar King Lepidus Ligarius looke Lord Lucillius Lucius Lupercal Marcus Marcus Brutus Mark Antony means Messa Messala Metellus misprint night Noble Brutus North North's Brutus Octa Octavius oration Philippi Pindarus play Plutarch poet Pompey Pompey's POPE Portia Publius Quarto Roman Rome Rowe says Scene selfe Senate SEYMOUR Shake Shakespeare shew Soothsayer speake speech spirit stand STEEV Strato sword tell thee THEOB thing thinke thou art Titinius Trebonius unto Volumnius WARB Wee'l word wrong