The Works of William Shakespeare, Band 17Jefferson Press [Bigelow, Smith & Company, 1909 |
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Seite 142
... Tribunes from caus- ing the people to mutiny again . Marcius , seeing the Sen- ate in great doubt how to resolve , asked aloud of the Tribunes what they would burden him with . They an- swered that they would show how he aspired to be ...
... Tribunes from caus- ing the people to mutiny again . Marcius , seeing the Sen- ate in great doubt how to resolve , asked aloud of the Tribunes what they would burden him with . They an- swered that they would show how he aspired to be ...
Seite 142
... Tribunes work , plying their craft and watching their time to pro- voke him into some fatal provocation of popular resent- ment . Hence the Poet , with great judgment , and without any hint from the history , makes Aufidius , when the ...
... Tribunes work , plying their craft and watching their time to pro- voke him into some fatal provocation of popular resent- ment . Hence the Poet , with great judgment , and without any hint from the history , makes Aufidius , when the ...
Seite xlii
... Tribunes , he can accept well - pleased a subordinate command under Cominius . He yields with kindly condescension to accept the devotion and fidelity of Menenius , and cherishes towards the old man a filial regard the feeling of a son ...
... Tribunes , he can accept well - pleased a subordinate command under Cominius . He yields with kindly condescension to accept the devotion and fidelity of Menenius , and cherishes towards the old man a filial regard the feeling of a son ...
Seite xliii
... Tribune is " the Triton of the minnows . " When Coriolanus departs from Rome , as though all the virtue of the city were resident in himself , he reverses the apparent fact and pronounces a sentence of banishment against those whom he ...
... Tribune is " the Triton of the minnows . " When Coriolanus departs from Rome , as though all the virtue of the city were resident in himself , he reverses the apparent fact and pronounces a sentence of banishment against those whom he ...
Seite xliv
... tribune that he had any artful motive for preferring the second place ; —it is quite clear that this is but part of his habitual loyalty to the aristocratic system which he bows to readily and instinc- tively , so long as it is true to ...
... tribune that he had any artful motive for preferring the second place ; —it is quite clear that this is but part of his habitual loyalty to the aristocratic system which he bows to readily and instinc- tively , so long as it is true to ...
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Alcib Alcibiades Antium Apem Apemantus Aufidius banished bear Brutus Caius Marcius Citizens Collier Cominius common conj consul Coriolanus Corioli dost enemies Enter Exeunt Exit eyes fear flatter Flav Flavius folio follow fool fortune friends give gods gold hand Hanmer hate hath hear heart honest honor ISRAEL GOLLANCZ Julius Cæsar ladies Lart live look Lord Timon Lucullus Menenius misanthropy mother nature ne'er never noble patricians peace Phrynia play plebeians Plutarch Plutus Poet Poet's pray pride prithee revenge Roman Rome scene Senators servant Shakespeare Sicinius slaves soldiers speak spirit stand Steevens sword Tarpeian rock tell thee There's thine thing Third Serv thou art thou hast thyself Timon of Athens tion Titus Lartius tribunes Tullus unto Virgilia voices Volsces Volscian Volumnia words worthy