Plutarch Revisited: A Study of Shakespeare's Last Roman Tragedies and Their SourceInst. fuer Anglistik u. Amerikanistik, 1979 - 280 páginas |
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Página 163
... peace was concluded presently with the Antiates , and the people returned again to Rome . 42 The peace mentioned here is the one closed with the Volscians in the play ( mentioned by Lartius in III , i , 2-3 ) . Shakespeare had no ...
... peace was concluded presently with the Antiates , and the people returned again to Rome . 42 The peace mentioned here is the one closed with the Volscians in the play ( mentioned by Lartius in III , i , 2-3 ) . Shakespeare had no ...
Página 184
... peace . He is sacrificing himself for the good of Rome , has given up his suggestion of abolishing the tribunate , and is showing his willingness to cooperate in ending civil strife . If the tribunes have any real love for their country ...
... peace . He is sacrificing himself for the good of Rome , has given up his suggestion of abolishing the tribunate , and is showing his willingness to cooperate in ending civil strife . If the tribunes have any real love for their country ...
Página 232
... peace . In Shakespeare he makes a treaty : " Aufidius , though I cannot make true wars , / I'll frame convenient peace " ( V , iii , 190-191 ) . The Volscians are angry that they do not win as much as they expected , but at least they ...
... peace . In Shakespeare he makes a treaty : " Aufidius , though I cannot make true wars , / I'll frame convenient peace " ( V , iii , 190-191 ) . The Volscians are angry that they do not win as much as they expected , but at least they ...
Palavras e frases frequentes
accusation action Actium answer Antony and Cleopatra Antony's Antony's return Athens audience Aufidius banishment battle Brutus Caesarion Canidius character CHARMIAN Cominius command consul corn critics death desertion dramatic dramatist earlier Egypt enemy Enobarbus episode Eros fact fear fight flatter FOOTNOTES CONT friends Fulvia give gods hath heart hero hero's historical honour Ibid Julius Caesar later Lepidus lord lover MacCallum Martius means Menas Menenius messenger MICHIGAN mother mutiny never nobility noble North's Octavia Octavius Caesar Parthians patricians peace play's plebeians Plutarch Plutarch's account Plutarch's Coriolanus Plutarchan political Pompey present Proculeius queen reason return to Cleopatra Roman plays Rome scene Seleucus Senate sent Shake Shakespeare Shakespeare's Antony Shakespeare's Cleopatra Shakespeare's Coriolanus Shakespeare's version Sicinius soldiers speech Spencer story tell thee Thidias thing thou Thyreus tragedy tragic tribunes Tullus unto Ventidius Volsces Volscians Volumnia wife words