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Clips from Julius Caesar (1953)
"She is dead."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Impatient of my absence, and grief that young Octavius"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Therein our letters do not well agree."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"No, Messala."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Nor nothing in your letters writ of her?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"The people 'twixt Philippi and this ground"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"You must note, beside, that we have tried the utmost of our friends."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Omitted, all the voyage of their life is bound in shallows and in miseries."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"On such a full sea are we now afloat,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"We'll along ourselves, and meet them at Philippi."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Good night, good brother."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Poor knave, I blame thee not. Thou art over-watched."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Call Claudius and some other of my men."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"I was sure your lordship did not give it me."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"and touch thy instrument a strain or two?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"I should not urge thy duty past thy might."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"I have slept, my lord, already."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"It was well done, and thou shalt sleep again."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"It is she"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Gentle knave, good night. I will not do thee so much wrong to wake thee."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"And, good boy, good night."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"How ill this taper burns."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Who comes here?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"I think it is the weakness of my eyes that shapes this monstrous apparition."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Art thou some god, some angel, or some devil,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"that mak'st my blood cold and my hair to stare?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Ay, at Philippi."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"III spirit, I would hold more talk with thee."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Ay. Saw you anything?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"- No, my lord, I saw nothing. - Nor I, my lord."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"It shall be done, my lord."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Now, most noble Brutus, the gods today stand friendly,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"What are you, then, determined to do?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"And whether we shall meet again I know not."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Therefore, our everlasting farewell take."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"and hide thy spurs in him,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"that I may rest assured whether those troops be friend or enemy."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"and where I did begin, there shall I end."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Come down. Behold no more."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"search this bosom."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Our enemies have beat us to the pit."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"It is more worthy to leap in ourselves than tarry till they push us."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Even for that our love of old, I prithee, hold thou my sword-hilts,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Hold then my sword, and turn away thy face,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Give me your hand first."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Farewell, good Strato."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"According to his virtue, let us use him"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Within my tent his bones tonight shall lie, most like a soldier,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Hence! Home, you idle creatures, get you home!"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"This is a holiday. What trade art thou?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Why, sir, a carpenter."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Where is thy leather apron and thy rule? What dost thou with thy best apparel on?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Truly, sir, in respect of a fine workman, I am but, as you would say, a cobbler."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"But what trade art thou? Answer me directly."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"which is indeed, sir, a mender of bad soles."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Truly, sir, to wear out their shoes, to get myself into more work."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"But indeed, sir, we make holiday to see Caesar"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"- and to rejoice in his triumph. - Wherefore rejoice?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"What conquest brings he home?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"What tributaries follow him to Rome,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"to grace in captive bonds his chariot wheels?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"You blocks, you stones,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"you worse than senseless things!"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"O you hard hearts, you cruel men of Rome,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Many a time and oft have you climbed up to walls and battlements,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"to towers and windows, yea, to chimney tops,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"your infants in your arms,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"and there have sat the live-long day with patient expectation"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"to see great Pompey pass the streets of Rome."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"And when you saw his chariot but appear,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"that Tiber trembled underneath her banks,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"to hear the replication of your sounds made in her concave shores?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"And do you now put on your best attire?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"And do you now cull out a holiday?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"And do you now strew flowers in his way"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"that comes in triumph over Pompey's blood?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"fall upon your knees,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"pray to the gods to intermit the plague"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"that needs must light on this ingratitude."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Go you down that way toward the Capitol."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"These growing feathers, plucked from Caesar's wing,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"will make him fly an ordinary pitch."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"and keep us all in servile fearfulness?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Calpurnia!"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"- Antonius. - Caesar, my lord?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Forget not, in your speed, Antonius, to touch Calpurnia,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Caesar!"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"- Who calls? - Bid every noise be still!"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"- Peace yet again! - Who is it in the press that calls on me?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Speak. Caesar is turned to hear."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Set him before me. Let me see his face."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Fellow, come from the throng."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"What sayest thou to me now? Speak once again."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Will you go see the order of the course?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Let me not hinder, Cassius, your desires. I'll leave you."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Brutus, I do observe you now of late."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"I have not from your eyes that gentleness and show of love as I was wont to have."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"You bear too stubborn and too strange a hand over your friend that loves you."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Cassius, be not deceived. If I have veiled my look,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"I turn the trouble of my countenance merely upon myself."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Vexed I am of late, with passions of some difference."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Conceptions only proper to myself,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"which give some soil, perhaps, to my behaviors,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"but let not therefore my good friends be grieved,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"forgets the shows of love to other men."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"No, Cassius, for the eye sees not itself but by reflection,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"by some other things."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"'Tis just. And it is very much lamented, Brutus, that you have no such mirrors"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"as will turn your hidden worthiness into your eye,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"I have heard where many of the best respect in Rome,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"except immortal Caesar,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"speaking of Brutus and groaning underneath this age's yoke,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Into what dangers would you lead me, Cassius,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"that you would have me seek into myself for that which is not in me?"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Therefore, good Brutus, be prepared to hear."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"And be not jealous on me, gentle Brutus."
Julius Caesar (1953)
"Were I a common laugher and did use to stale with ordinary oaths"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"my love to every new protester,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"or if you know that I profess myself in banqueting to all the rout,"
Julius Caesar (1953)
"I do fear the people choose Caesar for their king."
Julius Caesar (1953)
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