The Plays of William Shakespeare: Coriolanus. Julius Caesar |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 26
Page 8
Either you must Confess yourselves wondrous malicious , Or be accus'd of folly . I shall tell you A pretty tale ; it may be , you have heard it ; But , since it serves my purpose , I will venture To scale ' t a little more . i Cit .
Either you must Confess yourselves wondrous malicious , Or be accus'd of folly . I shall tell you A pretty tale ; it may be , you have heard it ; But , since it serves my purpose , I will venture To scale ' t a little more . i Cit .
Page 17
Tis not four days gone , Since I heard thence ; These are the words : I think , I have the letter here ; yes , here it is : [ reads . They have press'd a power , but it is not known Whether for east , or west : The dearth is great ...
Tis not four days gone , Since I heard thence ; These are the words : I think , I have the letter here ; yes , here it is : [ reads . They have press'd a power , but it is not known Whether for east , or west : The dearth is great ...
Page 22
Vir . O , good madam , there can be none yet . Val . Verily , I do not jest with you ;, there came news from him last night . Vir . Indeed , madam ? Val . In earnest , it's true ; I heard a senator speak it .
Vir . O , good madam , there can be none yet . Val . Verily , I do not jest with you ;, there came news from him last night . Vir . Indeed , madam ? Val . In earnest , it's true ; I heard a senator speak it .
Page 28
... Nor cowardly in retire : believe me , sirs , We shall be charg'd again . Whiles we have struck , By interims , and conveying gusts , we have heard The charges of our friends : - The Roman gods , Lead their successes as we wish our ...
... Nor cowardly in retire : believe me , sirs , We shall be charg'd again . Whiles we have struck , By interims , and conveying gusts , we have heard The charges of our friends : - The Roman gods , Lead their successes as we wish our ...
Page 29
Tis not a mile ; briefly we heard their drums : How could'st thou in a mile confound an hour , And bring thy news so laté ? Mess . Spies of the Volces Held me in chase , that I was forc'd to wheel Three or four miles about ; else had I ...
Tis not a mile ; briefly we heard their drums : How could'st thou in a mile confound an hour , And bring thy news so laté ? Mess . Spies of the Volces Held me in chase , that I was forc'd to wheel Three or four miles about ; else had I ...
What people are saying - Write a review
We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
answer Antony Aufidius bear better blood body bring Brutus Cæs Cæsar Caius Capitol Casca Cassius cause Citizens comes Cominius common consul Coriolanus dangerous death deed doth ears enemy Enter Exeunt Exit eyes face fear fire follow friends gates give gods gone hand hast hath hear heard heart hold honour JOHNSON keep ladies leave less live look lord Lucius Marcius Mark master mean meet Menenius mother nature never night noble once peace poor pray present reason Romans Rome SCENE senators Serv shout soldier speak spirit stand stay strange streets sword tell thee thing thou thought tongue tribunes true turn unto voices Volces wife worthy wounds wrong