| Peter Holland - 2002 - 436 páginas
...your actions you will be repaid in kind. In the moving final scene of the play he tells his audience: 'Countrymen, / My heart doth joy that yet in all my life / I found no man but he was true to me' (5.5.33-5). These are generous words and they help to explain why Brutus is regarded by friends and... | |
| 1984 - 456 páginas
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| Frank Harris - 2004 - 332 páginas
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| William Shakespeare - 2005 - 292 páginas
...you — and you — and you, Volumnius. — 35 Strato, thou hast been all this while asleep. Farewell to thee, too, Strato. — Countrymen, My heart doth...all my life I found no man but he was true to me. I shall have glory by this losing day 40 More than Octavius and Mark Antony By this vile conquest shall... | |
| Horst Zander - 2004 - 371 páginas
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| Kenneth Muir - 2005 - 224 páginas
...error — there are two last examples of the gulf between the ideal and the reality. He boasts absurdly that yet in all my life I found no man but he was true to me. And, before the battle, in successive speeches he declares that he will not, like Cato, commit suicide... | |
| ICON Reference - 2006 - 152 páginas
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| Jennifer Mulherin, William Shakespeare, Abigail Frost - 2004 - 164 páginas
...urges them to flee and bids them farewell. Brutus's farewell to his followers . . . Countrymen, .\[y heart doth joy that yet, in all my life, I found no man but he was true to me. I shall have glory by this losing day, More than Octavius and Mark Antonv By this vile conquest shall... | |
| Philip Freund - 2006 - 976 páginas
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