Julius CaesarPenguin UK, 2005 M04 7 - 272 páginas 'Cry havoc and let slip the dogs of war, |
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... common factors that underpin Shakespeare's career. Nothing in his heredity offers clues to the origins of his genius. His upbringing in Stratford-upon-Avon, where he was born in 1564, was unexceptional. His mother, born Mary Arden, came ...
... Common Prayer and the proverbial sayings of his day. Shakespeare was popular with his contemporaries, but his commitment to the theatre and to the plays in performance is demonstrated by the fact that only about half of his plays ...
... common with both genres: it combines, as I hope this Introduction will illuminate, the objective detachment of historiography with the personal engagement of tragedy. LISTENING TO RHETORIC More than any other Shakespeare play, Julius ...
... common perception. Perhaps, after the assassination, he is just being inappropriately facetious when he argues paradoxically that they are Caesar's friends because they have 'abridged | His time of fearing death' (III.1.104–5), but ...
... common: some may like a tragedy and some may not, some may like Shakespeare and some may not; but none of them will disapprove of the theatre on strict ideological grounds – otherwise they wouldn't be there in the first place. So when ...