Shakespeare, Julius CaesarEdward Arnold, 1976 - 63 páginas |
No interior do livro
Resultados 1-3 de 10
Página 24
... thou to show thy dang'rous brow by night , When evils are most free ? O , then by day Where wilt thou find a cavern dark enough To mask thy monstrous visage ? Seek none , conspiracy . Hide it in smiles and affability : ... The honest ...
... thou to show thy dang'rous brow by night , When evils are most free ? O , then by day Where wilt thou find a cavern dark enough To mask thy monstrous visage ? Seek none , conspiracy . Hide it in smiles and affability : ... The honest ...
Página 34
... thou bayed , brave hart ; Here didst thou fall ; and here thy hunters stand , Signed in thy spoil and crimsoned in thy lethe ... Brutus had said that the murder of Caesar would be a sacrifice , but Antony sees the dead Caesar not as a ...
... thou bayed , brave hart ; Here didst thou fall ; and here thy hunters stand , Signed in thy spoil and crimsoned in thy lethe ... Brutus had said that the murder of Caesar would be a sacrifice , but Antony sees the dead Caesar not as a ...
Página 41
... thou what course thou wilt . A servant enters and tells him that Octavius has arrived in Rome and that Brutus and Cassius have fled the city . ' Fortune is merry , / And in this mood will give us anything , ' comments Antony on the ...
... thou what course thou wilt . A servant enters and tells him that Octavius has arrived in Rome and that Brutus and Cassius have fled the city . ' Fortune is merry , / And in this mood will give us anything , ' comments Antony on the ...
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