Tag Archives: Plutarch’s Lives
“Indeed, it is a strange-disposed time:/But men may construe things after their fashion,/Clean from the purpose of the things themselves.”
Julius Caesar Act One, Part Two By Dennis Abrams ———————————- I’m struck by a couple of things: 1. The number of well-known lines and phrases, even just from Act One: “Beware the ides of March,” “Men at some time are … Continue reading
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Tagged act one, Brutus, Cassius, drama, history, history play, Julius Caesar, language, literature, Mark Antony, philosophy, Plutarch, Plutarch's Lives, politics, religion, renaissance humanism, Roman history, Roman play, Shakespeare, The ides of March, William Shakespeare
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