Julius Caesar'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
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... Noble Kinsmen and the lost play Cardenio. Shakespeare's output dwindled in his last years, and he died in 1616 in Stratford, where he owned a fine house, New Place, and much land. His only son had died at the age of eleven, in 1596, and ...
... Noble Kinsmen and the lost play Cardenio. Shakespeare's output dwindled in his last years, and he died in 1616 in Stratford, where he owned a fine house, New Place, and much land. His only son had died at the age of eleven, in 1596, and ...
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... Noble Grecians and Romans by the Greek writer Plutarch, finely translated into English from the French by Sir Thomas North in 1579, provided much of the narrative material, and also a mass of verbal detail, for his plays about Roman ...
... Noble Grecians and Romans by the Greek writer Plutarch, finely translated into English from the French by Sir Thomas North in 1579, provided much of the narrative material, and also a mass of verbal detail, for his plays about Roman ...
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... ; lost) The Two Noble Kinsmen (by Shakespeare and 1599–1600 1600–1601 1600–1601 by 1601 1602 1593–1603 and later 1603 1603–4 1603–4 1603–4 1604–5 1605 1605–6 1606 1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1613 1613 1613–14 Fletcher)
... ; lost) The Two Noble Kinsmen (by Shakespeare and 1599–1600 1600–1601 1600–1601 by 1601 1602 1593–1603 and later 1603 1603–4 1603–4 1603–4 1604–5 1605 1605–6 1606 1606 1607 1608 1609 1610 1611 1613 1613 1613–14 Fletcher)
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... Noble Grecians and Romans, in which he read a straightforward assertion that the two tribunes were removed from oce. But in writing his own version of the event, he introduced a sinister ambiguity: 'put to silence' can be played as one ...
... Noble Grecians and Romans, in which he read a straightforward assertion that the two tribunes were removed from oce. But in writing his own version of the event, he introduced a sinister ambiguity: 'put to silence' can be played as one ...
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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