The Tragedie of Julius Caesar |
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Page xxiii
... Plutarch which no dramatist of even ordinary ability could devise at the outset of his play without being well aware that he was laying the corner - stone of his dramatic action on the readiness of the plebs to be- friend Cæsar , and in ...
... Plutarch which no dramatist of even ordinary ability could devise at the outset of his play without being well aware that he was laying the corner - stone of his dramatic action on the readiness of the plebs to be- friend Cæsar , and in ...
Page xxv
... Plutarch says Antony , as a cosmopolitan traveler , had learned the trick of , this burden of warm - hearted brotherliness was bound to overmaster the cool appeal of Brutus to the intellect , made in bald and barren style studied imi ...
... Plutarch says Antony , as a cosmopolitan traveler , had learned the trick of , this burden of warm - hearted brotherliness was bound to overmaster the cool appeal of Brutus to the intellect , made in bald and barren style studied imi ...
Page 98
... Antony's forces . Cassius runs on his own sword . Brutus rallies for a last attack , but meets defeat and falls on his own sword . SOURCES The PLUTARCH'S Lives of Julius Cæsar , Marcus Brutus 98 THE TRAGEDIE OF JULIUS CÆSAR.
... Antony's forces . Cassius runs on his own sword . Brutus rallies for a last attack , but meets defeat and falls on his own sword . SOURCES The PLUTARCH'S Lives of Julius Cæsar , Marcus Brutus 98 THE TRAGEDIE OF JULIUS CÆSAR.
Page 99
... Plutarch's statement of the reason for the conspiracy against Cæsar : But the chiefest cause that made him mortally hated , was the covetous desire he had to be called king : which first gave the people just cause , and next his secret ...
... Plutarch's statement of the reason for the conspiracy against Cæsar : But the chiefest cause that made him mortally hated , was the covetous desire he had to be called king : which first gave the people just cause , and next his secret ...
Page 100
... Plutarch mentioned , and all three of the Lives drawn from repeat the incident of Cæsar's distrust of lean men like Cassius . From the Life of Brutus ' is drawn for Act I .: the agreement between Cassius and Brutus , and the writings in ...
... Plutarch mentioned , and all three of the Lives drawn from repeat the incident of Cæsar's distrust of lean men like Cassius . From the Life of Brutus ' is drawn for Act I .: the agreement between Cassius and Brutus , and the writings in ...
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2DYCE ANON Antony's Artemidorus beare blood Brut Brutus and Cassius Brutus's Cæs Cæsarism Caius Calphurnia Capitoll Casar Cask Caska Cassius Cato cause Cicero Cinna Clitus COLL conspirators CRAIK Crowne death Decius doth Elizabethan enemies Exeunt Exit feare fire flye Folio follow Friends generall ghost give Gods greefes hand hast hath heare heart heere Honourable Ides of March Julius Cæsar King Lepidus Ligarius looke Lord Lucillius Lucius Lupercal Marcus Marcus Brutus Mark Antony means Messa Messala Metellus misprint morrow night North North's Brutus Octa Octavius oration Philippi Pindarus play Plutarch Poet 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 Titinius Trebonius unto Volumnius WARB Wee'l word wrong ΙΟ