The Shake-speare tragedy of Julius Cæsar . t sense, or sense without a soul —DieAugmentis (1623). It is also seen that the dramatist repudiated the doctrineof planetary influences in the play of lulius Caesar, whichwas first published in 1623. Chiefly the mould of a mans fortune is in himself.—Essay of Fortune (1607-12). It was Bacons opinion that the influence of the stars isexerted, not on individual men, but directly on masses ofmen, though he made an exception in favor of certain per-sons who, he said, are more susceptible, and of softer wax,as it were, than the rest of their species. It i


The Shake-speare tragedy of Julius Cæsar . t sense, or sense without a soul —DieAugmentis (1623). It is also seen that the dramatist repudiated the doctrineof planetary influences in the play of lulius Caesar, whichwas first published in 1623. Chiefly the mould of a mans fortune is in himself.—Essay of Fortune (1607-12). It was Bacons opinion that the influence of the stars isexerted, not on individual men, but directly on masses ofmen, though he made an exception in favor of certain per-sons who, he said, are more susceptible, and of softer wax,as it were, than the rest of their species. It is clear that Cassius would not have been included byhim in his excepted class. *\\*In the folio, more then yours; and then is the in-variable form in that edition, as in Bacon, Hooker, had varied. IViclif has than for both than and then,while Tyndale has then for both. Milton has than for thenm the Hymn on the Nativity, 88. Full little thought they thanThat the mighty PanWas kindly • come to live with them below. — S w Act I. ScENR II. 15 \\Belief in the existence of a class of invisible beings, goodand bad, inhabiting the world, and far outnumbering thehuman race, was until modern times wellnigh universal. Theywere regarded in Europe as the descendants of Adam by awife named Lisbeth, whom he married before he marriedEve. Goethe introduced her as one of the characters inFaust. It was customary for men to invoke them with thename of saints and other important personages. This waspublicly done in a church in Spain as late as 1876, a youngwoman lying in convulsions and foaming at the mouth beforethe altar, while the spirit was being exorcised by a priest. Cf. 1 King Henry IV.: Glendowin. I can call spirits from the vasty deep. Hotspur. Why, so can I, or so can any But will they come when you do call them? —III., 1, 54. *\\The flood referred to is Deucalions, both authors seem,-ing to agree that one man only was then living in the world. Cf. Ba


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Keywords: ., bookauthorshakespearewilliam156, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900