Julius Caesar and Its SourceInst. f. Anglistik u. Amerikanistik, Univ. Salzburg, 1979 - 129 ページ |
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... soliloquy at the beginning of Act II is a significant departure from Plutarch . The speech is totally Shakespeare's invention . Brutus reflects that although Caesar until now has done nothing reprehensible , he might once he is crowned ...
... soliloquy at the beginning of Act II is a significant departure from Plutarch . The speech is totally Shakespeare's invention . Brutus reflects that although Caesar until now has done nothing reprehensible , he might once he is crowned ...
44 ページ
... soliloquy on Caesar is original with Shakespeare and makes several departures from the situation in the source . In my opinion , the speech is included not to show that Brutus is still deliberating over the question of Caesar's death ...
... soliloquy on Caesar is original with Shakespeare and makes several departures from the situation in the source . In my opinion , the speech is included not to show that Brutus is still deliberating over the question of Caesar's death ...
57 ページ
... soliloquy he had acquitted Caesar of any kind of tyrannical behaviour .... A little later , in the company of the conspirators , he tries to persuade himself that Caesar is already a full - blown tyrant ... Caesar here is no longer the ...
... soliloquy he had acquitted Caesar of any kind of tyrannical behaviour .... A little later , in the company of the conspirators , he tries to persuade himself that Caesar is already a full - blown tyrant ... Caesar here is no longer the ...
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accuse action angry Antony argument audience battle bear better blood Brutus and Cassius Brutus answers Brutus knows Brutus says Caesar's death Caesar's friends Caius Calphurnia Casca Cassius gives Cato cause character choleric Cicero Cinna condemn'd conspiracy conspirators danger dead Decius denied Brutus drachmas dramatic dramatist enemies extortion fact Faonius faults fear follow funeral ghost grief hand heart hero honour ides of March imagine incident Julius Caesar kill Caesar knows Cassius Ligarius Lucius Pella Lupercal Marcus Brutus Mark Antony means Messala mind moral murder never noble Brutus Octavius once oration passage Philippi play Plutarch Plutarch's Brutus poet political Pompey populace Portia Portia's death Praetorship quarrel scene reason Roman Rome Sardis Schanzer self-delusion Senate Shakespeare Shakespeare's Brutus Shakespeare's Caesar show Brutus soldiers soliloquy speak spirit statement stoicism tell tent thou thought thrasonically Titinius true tyranny tyrant unto vile wants words wrong