The End of the Ancient Republic: Essays on Julius CaesarWhile recent criticism of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar has stressed the corruption of both the common people and the Republic's enemies within the patrician class, this book argues that at the core of the play lies the less obvious but more important corruption of the regime's leading defenders, particularly Brutus. |
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Page 21
... defending the assassination , he asks the people rhetorically , “ Had you rather Caesar were living , and die all slaves , than that Caesar were dead , to live all free men ? " ( III.ii.23-25 ) As Caesar's living would doom Rome to ...
... defending the assassination , he asks the people rhetorically , “ Had you rather Caesar were living , and die all slaves , than that Caesar were dead , to live all free men ? " ( III.ii.23-25 ) As Caesar's living would doom Rome to ...
Page 28
... defend the family , not the city . The city is no part of their worship , but is completely absent from the obligations ... defending the traditional role of the senatorial class , so that the constitution can remain intact . " Although ...
... defend the family , not the city . The city is no part of their worship , but is completely absent from the obligations ... defending the traditional role of the senatorial class , so that the constitution can remain intact . " Although ...
Page 76
... defending the assassination , twice lists four things he gave Caesar ; Antony , defending Caesar , offers a matching list of his own . The four items on his list correspond directly to the four on Brutus ' list , but on the level of the ...
... defending the assassination , twice lists four things he gave Caesar ; Antony , defending Caesar , offers a matching list of his own . The four items on his list correspond directly to the four on Brutus ' list , but on the level of the ...
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Common terms and phrases
actions Allan Bloom ambition ancestors Antony and Cleopatra Antony's appear Appian assassination Bloom brother Brutus and Cassius Caesar's Ambiguous Caesar's death Caesar's funeral Casca cause character Cicero citizens Cleopatra cobbler conquest conspirators Coriolanus corruption crown decision Decius deed defeat defend enemies ethics of intention fear feast of Lupercal Flavius friendship glory gods hath heart hero honor human III.iii important John Dover Wilson Julius Caesar killing Caesar king Lupercal MacCallum manly Mark Antony Marullus mixed regime monarchy moral motives Mungo MacCallum never noble northern star Octavius opposition oration patriotic people's pity Pompey Portia private concerns reminds Republic's republican Rome Roman Republic Rome's sacrifice sar's says scene seems Senate Shake Shakespeare's Plutarch Shakespeare's Politics Shakespeare's Roman Plays shame shows Skeat souls speaks speech spirit Stoic Suetonius swear an oath tell tion Titinius traditional tribunes triumph Univ universal empire victory virtue words