| Sally Martin - 2002 - 378 pages
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| Sally Martin - 2002 - 377 pages
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| Agnes Heller - 2002 - 390 pages
...understand the fear of dying: "Cowards die many times before their deaths; / The valiant never taste the death but once. / Of all the wonders that I yet have...death, a necessary end, / Will come when it will come" (2.2.32-37). Similarly, Caesar always tells the truth because he does not care for lying. Lying is... | |
| Mark Morris - 2003 - 72 pages
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| Giles MacDonogh - 2003 - 572 pages
...armed with machine-guns. Falstaffs line was not enough. Now he recalled something from Julius Caesar: Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant...that death, a necessary end, Will come when it will come.3' It came to him in bed, nearly twenty-three years later. IV Max Filrstenberg arrived from Vienna... | |
| Giles MacDonogh - 2001 - 272 pages
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| Joseph D. Camhi - 2003 - 201 pages
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| Joseph D. Camhi - 2003 - 202 pages
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| Alfred R. Mele, Piers Rawling - 2004 - 498 pages
...irrational because the emotion makes one miserable without the prospect of a compensating benefit: Cowards die many times before their deaths; The valiant...death, a necessary end, Will come when it will come. (II. 1i.37-42) Let us charitably interpret the poem as only a criticism of fear of death itself (and... | |
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