Julius Caesar'Daniell's edition is a hefty piece of serious scholarship that makes a genuine contribution.'Eric Rasmussen, University of Nevada at Reno, Shakespeare Survey'This is a stimulating new look at a play which is too often exhibited in a critical museum.' Paul Dean, English Studies 81,1, |
From inside the book
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Page 131
... lines to Caesar ( 3.1.55–7 ) begin ' Pardon , Caesar : Caesar , pardon ' ( the commas are modern ) . Antony shaking the bloody hands of the conspirators at 3.1.190 says , ' Gentlemen all : alas , what shall I say ? ' , where the ...
... lines to Caesar ( 3.1.55–7 ) begin ' Pardon , Caesar : Caesar , pardon ' ( the commas are modern ) . Antony shaking the bloody hands of the conspirators at 3.1.190 says , ' Gentlemen all : alas , what shall I say ? ' , where the ...
Page 133
... lines together ? Editors , as in this edition , almost always make a full line , presumably because there can be felt to be advantage in Brutus completing Cassius ' medical question with the contrast of four unclinical words ...
... lines together ? Editors , as in this edition , almost always make a full line , presumably because there can be felt to be advantage in Brutus completing Cassius ' medical question with the contrast of four unclinical words ...
Page 134
... lines in Brutus ' soliloquy in 2.1 , and suspect they are Shakespeare's . At 2.1.50 and 62 , Folio's separate lines for ' Where I have tooke them up ' and ' I have not slept ' single out for emphasis Brutus ' only actions in the perfect ...
... lines in Brutus ' soliloquy in 2.1 , and suspect they are Shakespeare's . At 2.1.50 and 62 , Folio's separate lines for ' Where I have tooke them up ' and ' I have not slept ' single out for emphasis Brutus ' only actions in the perfect ...
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Common terms and phrases
Antony's ARTEMIDORUS assassination battle battle of Philippi bicause blood Brutus and Cassius Caius Calphurnia Cam¹ Capell Capitol Caska Cato cause Cicero Cimber Cinna CLITUS conspiracy conspirators death Decius doth dramatic edited Elizabethan emended enemies Exeunt Exit F lines fear Flavius Folio give Greek Hamlet hand hath hear heart Henry honour Julius Caesar kill King Lepidus Ligarius litle lord Lucilius Lucius Lupercalia Marcus Marcus Brutus Mark Antony means Messala Metellus mind murder Murellus night noble notes Octavius Caesar oration Oxf¹ Philippi phrase Pindarus play PLEBEIAN Plutarch Appendix political Pompey Pompey's Portia Publius Quarrel scene rhetoric Richard II Roman Rome Rowe sayd selfe Senate sense Shakespeare slaine soldiers Soothsayer speak speech spirit stage Strato Suetonius suggests sword tell theatre thee things thou thought tion Titinius tragedy Trebonius tyranny unto Volumnius words