The Plays of William Shakespeare, Tập 14 |
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Trang 21
Enter , from opposite sides , CASCA , with his sword drawn , and CICERO . Cic . Good even , Casca : Brought you Cæsar home ? 9 Why are you breathless ? and why stare you so ? Casca . Are not you mov'd when all the sway of earth !
Enter , from opposite sides , CASCA , with his sword drawn , and CICERO . Cic . Good even , Casca : Brought you Cæsar home ? 9 Why are you breathless ? and why stare you so ? Casca . Are not you mov'd when all the sway of earth !
Trang 35
Here , as I point my sword , the sun arises ; Which is a great way growing on the south , Weighing the youthful season of the year . Some two months hence , up higher toward the north He first presents his fire ; and the high east ...
Here , as I point my sword , the sun arises ; Which is a great way growing on the south , Weighing the youthful season of the year . Some two months hence , up higher toward the north He first presents his fire ; and the high east ...
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... in the old translation of Plutarch in his thoughts : " Cæsar turned himselfe no where but he was stricken at by some , and still had naked swords in his face , and was hacked and mangled among them as a wild beast taken of hunters .
... in the old translation of Plutarch in his thoughts : " Cæsar turned himselfe no where but he was stricken at by some , and still had naked swords in his face , and was hacked and mangled among them as a wild beast taken of hunters .
Trang 49
Again , ibid : " To toss the spear , and in a warlike gyre " To hurtle my sharp sword about my head . " Shakspeare uses the word again in As you Like it : 66 in which hurtling , " From miserable slumber I awak'd . " Steevens .
Again , ibid : " To toss the spear , and in a warlike gyre " To hurtle my sharp sword about my head . " Shakspeare uses the word again in As you Like it : 66 in which hurtling , " From miserable slumber I awak'd . " Steevens .
Trang 62
Plutarch says , that on receiving his first wound from Casca , " he caught hold of Casca's sword , and held it hard ; and they both cried out , Cæsar in Latin , O vile traitor , Casca , what doest thou ? and Casca in Greek to his ...
Plutarch says , that on receiving his first wound from Casca , " he caught hold of Casca's sword , and held it hard ; and they both cried out , Cæsar in Latin , O vile traitor , Casca , what doest thou ? and Casca in Greek to his ...
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ancient answer Antony appears bear believe better blood Brutus Cæsar called Casca Cassius cause comes common copies Cordelia Corn daughters death doth Edgar edition editors Enter Exit expression eyes fall father fear fire folio Fool fortune give Gloster gods hand hast hath head hear heart Henry hold honour Johnson Kent kind king Lear less live look lord Malone Mark Mason master means mind nature never night noble observed omitted once passage perhaps play poor present quartos reason says scene seems seen sense Shakspeare signifies speak speech spirit stand Steevens suppose sword tell thee thing thou thought true turn Warburton word