Julius Caesar |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 40
Page xiii
... common register in which each one entered the title of any work which he intended to bring out ; he then had the exclusive right to publish the book . This register has come down to us , and many of Shakespeare's plays are here entered ...
... common register in which each one entered the title of any work which he intended to bring out ; he then had the exclusive right to publish the book . This register has come down to us , and many of Shakespeare's plays are here entered ...
Page xl
... common people are described in the first scene as if they were English me- chanics . Indeed , Shakespeare seems to have the handicrafts- men of London constantly in mind in depicting the Roman populace . We are made to wonder whether ...
... common people are described in the first scene as if they were English me- chanics . Indeed , Shakespeare seems to have the handicrafts- men of London constantly in mind in depicting the Roman populace . We are made to wonder whether ...
Page xliii
... common people of Rome as too fickle , too ignorant , too subject to demagogues , to deserve the slightest respect . Coriolanus tells the populace : - " He that depends Upon your favours swims with fins of lead , And hews down oaks with ...
... common people of Rome as too fickle , too ignorant , too subject to demagogues , to deserve the slightest respect . Coriolanus tells the populace : - " He that depends Upon your favours swims with fins of lead , And hews down oaks with ...
Page xlv
... common , and in Cheapside shall my palfry go to grass ; and when I am king , as king I will be , All . God save your majesty ! Cade . I thank you , good people : there shall be no money ; all shall eat and drink on my score ; and I will ...
... common , and in Cheapside shall my palfry go to grass ; and when I am king , as king I will be , All . God save your majesty ! Cade . I thank you , good people : there shall be no money ; all shall eat and drink on my score ; and I will ...
Page xlvii
... common people were in his own time and had been in the past . A dramatist has , perhaps , no call to be a prophet . If in Shakespeare's own thinking he caught no glimpse of the coming day of demo- cratic institutions and this seems ...
... common people were in his own time and had been in the past . A dramatist has , perhaps , no call to be a prophet . If in Shakespeare's own thinking he caught no glimpse of the coming day of demo- cratic institutions and this seems ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
adjective Artemidorus back stage battle bear blood Brutus and Cassius Brutus's Cade Cæs Caesar Caius called Calpurnia Capitol Casca Cassius Cato character Cicero Cimber Cinna common conspiracy conspirators danger Decius Brutus doth drama Elizabethan enemies English Enter Exeunt Exit fear feast of Lupercal fire Folio Fourth Cit friends funeral give gods hand hath hear heart honour humour ides of March incident Julius Cæsar Lepidus Ligarius look lord Lucilius Lucius Marcus Marcus Brutus Mark Antony market-place meaning Messala Metellus mind night noble Octavius Philippi Pindarus play Plutarch poet Pompey Pompey's Portia present Roman Rome scene seems Senate Shake Shakespeare slain Soothsayer speak speech Strato sword syllable tell theater thee thing Third Cit thou art thought Titinius to-day transferred epithet Trebonius unto verb verse Volumnius William Shakespeare word