Anglica, Volum 5,Utgaver 1-41962 |
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Side 11
... Brutus's self - persuadings - full as these are of subjunctives and conditional verbs , which run full tilt against the reality that Brutus himself acknowledges : The abuse of greatness is when it disjoins Remorse ( pity ) from power ...
... Brutus's self - persuadings - full as these are of subjunctives and conditional verbs , which run full tilt against the reality that Brutus himself acknowledges : The abuse of greatness is when it disjoins Remorse ( pity ) from power ...
Side 13
... Brutus , skillfully enlisting what Brutus feels is due to his own " honour . " I do not wish here to pursue the temptation scene in any detail ; but that it is temptation the play leaves us in no doubt . At the end of the long ...
... Brutus , skillfully enlisting what Brutus feels is due to his own " honour . " I do not wish here to pursue the temptation scene in any detail ; but that it is temptation the play leaves us in no doubt . At the end of the long ...
Side 22
... Brutus , defeated and brought to bay with his " poor remains of friends , " he senses that this is no accident of defeat but the working out of the destiny to which he committed himself long before : Night hangs upon mine eyes ; my ...
... Brutus , defeated and brought to bay with his " poor remains of friends , " he senses that this is no accident of defeat but the working out of the destiny to which he committed himself long before : Night hangs upon mine eyes ; my ...
Innhold
The Auxiliary Do In John Drydens Plays Keitaro Irie | 1 |
The Language of The Spectator | 20 |
藤木白鳳 | 63 |
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According action appears authors auxiliary beginning Brutus Caesar called cause century characters comes common Congreve criticism death Dialect double-meaning effect Elizabethan English examples expression eyes fact Falstaff fear feeling Fool give hand head honour human hyphened idea instance kill kind King Lady language Lear letter linguistic literary literature live London look Macbeth meaning mind Modesty moral nature negative never night once original passage person play poem poetic poetry present prose question reason reference relation scene seems seen sense sentence separate Shakespeare shows simple solid soliloquy sound speak speech stand style thee thing thou thought town Troilus turn University various verb verse woman word writes