Shakespeare, Julius CaesarEdward Arnold, 1976 - 63 páginas |
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Página 16
... language of public rhetoric , not of inward debate . Now we must not be too censorious about this . We know that it was an accepted convention of Shakespeare's stage that characters can talk of their own virtue in a purely informative ...
... language of public rhetoric , not of inward debate . Now we must not be too censorious about this . We know that it was an accepted convention of Shakespeare's stage that characters can talk of their own virtue in a purely informative ...
Página 35
... language , in its concreteness and in the human appeal of its cadences , makes Brutus sound like an abstract logic - chopper and Cassius like a run - of - the - mill politician . We await in high suspense Brutus's public justification ...
... language , in its concreteness and in the human appeal of its cadences , makes Brutus sound like an abstract logic - chopper and Cassius like a run - of - the - mill politician . We await in high suspense Brutus's public justification ...
Página 43
... language soars : this is not the Brutus of the conversation with Portia or the considerate words for the boy Lucius ( though we are to hear that Brutus again soon ) : it is a Brutus who addresses Cassius like a public meeting and as a ...
... language soars : this is not the Brutus of the conversation with Portia or the considerate words for the boy Lucius ( though we are to hear that Brutus again soon ) : it is a Brutus who addresses Cassius like a public meeting and as a ...
Palavras e frases frequentes
abstract admirable already ambitious anger Antony Antony's speech audience battle blood Brutus and Cassius Brutus replies Brutus's speech cadence Caesar's body Caesar's murder Caius Calphurnia Casca Cassius's character Cinna conspiracy conspirators crowd D. H. Lawrence David Daiches dead Decius effect elegiac fact feeling Flavius friendship genuine gesture goes grief heart human idealism ides of March James Joyce join judgement Julius Caesar kill Caesar kind language Lepidus logic manipulator Mark Antony Marullus moral motives moved murder Caesar murder of Caesar Nervii noble Octavius Octavius's passions Philippi play Plutarch political Pompey Pompey's Portia provokes quarrel question reason reproaches Richard III ritual Roman Rome says scene senseless things servile fearfulness Shakespeare Shakespeare's stage shows soldier soothsayer speak spirit of Caesar stage auditors suggests takes talk tell thee third person thou Titinius tone tragedy Trebonius turns view of Caesar voice words wrong