The Shake-speare tragedy of Julius Cæsar . , /, ^ ;- -^ /-? ?. -y/-^Ai. A 1^%& -\ ;•*- .r*s:i^( CopyrightF. K. ROGERS 1909 CCU25(>741 / CONTENTS. Page PrKI^ACE V Introduction VII HisTORiCAi, Characters in the Drama . XI Act I I Act II 27 Act III . 47 Act IV 68 Act V 84 References 98 Criticai, Comments 98 Index of Words and Phrases Expi^ained ioi PREFACE. The Tragedy of Julius Caesar was first pub-lished in the 1623 Folio edition of the Shake-speareplays, there being no evidence existing to showwith any certainty when it was composed. In 1598Francis Meres gave a list in his Palladis Tamia of


The Shake-speare tragedy of Julius Cæsar . , /, ^ ;- -^ /-? ?. -y/-^Ai. A 1^%& -\ ;•*- .r*s:i^( CopyrightF. K. ROGERS 1909 CCU25(>741 / CONTENTS. Page PrKI^ACE V Introduction VII HisTORiCAi, Characters in the Drama . XI Act I I Act II 27 Act III . 47 Act IV 68 Act V 84 References 98 Criticai, Comments 98 Index of Words and Phrases Expi^ained ioi PREFACE. The Tragedy of Julius Caesar was first pub-lished in the 1623 Folio edition of the Shake-speareplays, there being no evidence existing to showwith any certainty when it was composed. In 1598Francis Meres gave a list in his Palladis Tamia of thirteen of the Shake-speare plays then in exis-tence, but the Julius Caesar was not one of years later Weever published a book entitledThe Mirror of Martyrs, in which we find thefollowing lines: The many-headed multitude were Brutus speech that Caesar was ambitious,When eloquent Mark Antony had shownHis virtues, who but Brutus then was vicious. It is not unreasonable to infer that these lineswere suggested by Mark Antonys speech in Act Ishakespearetrage00shak


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Keywords: ., bookauthorshakespearewilliam156, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900