Julius Caesar'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
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... bears the author's dedication to Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton (1573–1624), the second in warmer terms than the first. Southampton, younger than Shakespeare by ten years, is the only person to whom he personally dedicated works ...
... bears the author's dedication to Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton (1573–1624), the second in warmer terms than the first. Southampton, younger than Shakespeare by ten years, is the only person to whom he personally dedicated works ...
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... bear sustained scrutiny. For example, Caesar's determination to go to the Senate despite all danger is expressed to ... bears no relation to any sane perception of reality; it is no basis on which to take a life-or-death decision. It is ...
... bear sustained scrutiny. For example, Caesar's determination to go to the Senate despite all danger is expressed to ... bears no relation to any sane perception of reality; it is no basis on which to take a life-or-death decision. It is ...
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... bear not to have the best of the encounter, and Flavius' bearing disintegrates all too easily into comical alliterative bluster when he can't get a straight answer from the recalcitrant cobbler: 'What trade, thou knave? Thou naughty ...
... bear not to have the best of the encounter, and Flavius' bearing disintegrates all too easily into comical alliterative bluster when he can't get a straight answer from the recalcitrant cobbler: 'What trade, thou knave? Thou naughty ...
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action actor appear assassination audience battle bear better blood body Brutus called Capitol Casca Cassius cause characters Cinna comes common conspirators dangerous dead death Decius doth effect Elizabethan enemies Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fear fire Flavius friends give gods hand hath hear heart hold honour Italy Julius Caesar keep kill later leave lines live look lord Lucilius Lucius March Mark Antony matter meaning meet Messala mind moved murder nature never night noble Octavius offered once performance perhaps play PLEBEIAN Plutarch political Portia present reading reason reference rest Roman Rome scene Senate SERVANT Shakespeare sick soldiers speak speech spirit stage stand statue suggested sword tell theatre thee things thou Titinius took true turn unto wrong