Act V. Sc. v. Tragedy of Julius Cæsar Lucil. So Brutus should be found. I thank thee, Brutus, That thou hast proved Lucilius' saying true. Oct. All that served Brutus, I will entertain them. Fellow, wilt thou bestow thy time with me? Mes. How died my master, Strato? Stra. I held the sword, and he did run on it. That did the latest service to my master. So mix'd in him that Nature might stand up With all respect and rites of burial. 60 70 80 [Exeunt. Glossary. ABIDE, answer for, suffer for; III. i. !, set to work; III. ii. 208. I12. ALONE, only; IV. iii. 94. ANCHISES, the father of Æneas; when Troy was sacked he bore him on his shoulders from the burning town; I. ii. 114. ANGEL, darling, favourite, (?) guardian angel; III. ii. 185. ANNOY, injure, harm; II. i. 160. ANSWER, be ready for combat; V. i. 24. ANSWER'D, paid for, atoned for; III. ii. 85. ANSWERED, faced; IV. i. 47. APT, suitable, likely, II. ii. 97. AT HAND, in hand; IV. il. 23. AUGHT, anything; I. ii. 85. AUGURERS, professional interpreters of omens, (originally, diviners by the flight and cries of birds); II. i. 200. BAIT, hunt, chase (Theobald, "bay"); IV. iii. 28. BANG, blow; III. iii. 20. BARREN-SPIRITED, dull; IV. i. 36. BASTARDY, act of baseness: II. i 138. BATTLES, forces; V. i. 4. BEAR A HAND OVER, hold in check (as a rider); I. ii. 35. BEAR HARD, bear ill-will against; I. ii. 317; II. i. 215. BEAR ME, bear from me, receive from me; III. iii. 20. BEARS (BETRAYED) WITH GLASSES; alluding to the stories that bears were surprised by means of mirrors, which they would gaze into, affording their pursuers an opportunity of taking a surer aim; II. i. 205. BEAT, beaten; V. v. 23. BEHAVIOURS, Conduct; I. ii. 42. BEHOLDING, beholden; III. ii. 70. BELIKE, perhaps; III. ii. 275. BEND, look; I. ii. 123. BENDING, directing, pressing on; IV. iii. 170. BEST; you were b.", it were best for you; III. iii. 13. BESTOW, Spend; V. v. 61. BETIMES, in good time, early; II. i. 116. BILLS, billets, written documents; V. ii. 1. BIRD OF NIGHT, i.e. the owl; I. iii. 26. BLOOD; "Pompey's b." (probably) offspring; Gnæus, Pompey's son, had been killed at Munda, and Cæsar's triumph was in honour of the victory; I. i. 56. BLOODS; " young b.", young people; IV. iii. 262. BONDMAN, used with a play upon "bond," i.e. document ("to cancel a bond"); I. iii. 101. BONES, body, corpse; V. v. 78. BOOTLESS, without avail, to no purpose; III. i. 75. BOSOмs; "in their b.", in their confidence; V. i. 7. BREAK WITH, broach the subject to; II. i. 150. BRING, take; III. ii. 276. BROTHER, i.e. brother-in-law, (Cassius having married a sister of Brutus); II. i. 70. BROUGHT, accompanied; I. iii. 1. BRUTUS; old B.", i.e. Lucius Junius Brutus, who expelled the Tarquins; I. iii. 146; (cp. 1. ii. 159). "Decius B.", i.e. Decimus B., (the error being due to a misprint in Amyot's French translation of Plutarch, copied by North, and hence in Shakespeare); Decimus B. was placed next after Octavius in Cæsar's will; he had served under Cæsar in Gaul, and was made governor of Cisalpine Gaul; I. iii. 148. BUDGE, give way; IV. iii. 44. BUSTLING RUMOUR, noise of tumult; II. iv. 18. By, near, close to; III. i. 162. CALCULATE, speculate upon future events; I. iii. 65. CALPURNIA, Cæsar's fourth wife, (F. 1, "Calphurnia"); I. ii. 1. CARRIONS, worthless beings (a term of contempt); II. i. 130. CAST; "C. yourself in wonder," i.e. throw yourself into wonder; (?) "dress hastily"; (Jervis conj. "Case," i.e. encase, clothe yourself"); I. iii. 60. CAUTELOUS, crafty; II. i. 129. CENSURE, judge; III. ii. 16. CEREMONIES, festal ornaments; I. i. 70. , religious observances; II. i. 197. -, omens; II. ii. 13. CHAFING WITH, fretting against; I. ii. CHARGES, troops; IV. ii. 48. -, come to terms; III. i. 202. CLOSET, room; III. ii. 134. COBBLER, botcher, (used quibblingly); 1. i. 11. COGNIZANCE, badges of honours; II. ii. 89. COLOSSUS, a gigantic statue said to have stood astride at the entrance of the harbour at Rhodes; I. ii. COURTESIES, bowings, bendings of the 136. COLOUR, pretext; II. i. 29. COME BY, get possession; II. i. 259. COMPANION, fellow; (used contemptuously); IV. iii. 138. COMPARE, let us compare, we will compare; III. ii. 9. COMPASS, circle, course; V. iii. 25. COMPLEXION, appearance; I. iii. 128. CONCEIT, think of; III. i. 192. CONCEITED, conceived; I. iii. 162. CONCEPTIONS, ideas; I. ii. 41. CONCLUDED, decided; II. ii. 93. CONDITION, disposition; II. i. 254. CONFINES, boundaries; III. i. 272. CONN'D BY ROTE, learnt by heart; IV. iii. 98. CONSORTED, escorted, accompanied; CONSTANCY, firmness; II. iv. 6. calm; IV. ii. 41. , glad; V. i. 8. CONTRIVE, Conspire, plot; II. iii. 16. CONTRIVER, Schemer, plotter; II. i. 158. CONTROVERSY; "hearts of c.", spirits eager for resistance; I. ii. 109. CORSE, Corpse; III. i. 199. COUCHINGS, stoopings; III. i. 36. COUNTERS, round pieces of metal used in calculations; IV. iii. 80. COURSE; "run his c.", alluding to the course of the Luperci round the city wall; "that day there are diverse noble men's sons, young men, and some of them magistrates themselves, that govern them, which run naked through the city, striking in sport them they meet in their way with leathern thongs" (made of the skins of goats which had been sacrificed).North's Plutarch; I. ii. 4. knee; III. i. 36. CROSS LIGHTNING, forked lightning; CULL OUT, pick out; I. i. 54. DAMN, condemn; IV. i. 6. DEGREES, steps; II. i. 26. ENSIGN, standard; V. i. 80. standard-bearer (and by implica tion, standard; hence "it," line 4); V. iii. 3. ENTERTAIN, take into service; V. v. 60. ENVIOUS, spiteful, malicious; II. i. 178; III. i. 179. ENVY, hatred, malice; II. i. 164. EPICURUS; 'I held E. strong," i.e. I followed the Epicurean school, which held that the gods scarcely troubled themselves with human affairs; hence the Epicureans regarded the belief in omens as mere superstition; V. iii. 77. EREBUS, the region of utter darkness between Earth and Hades; II. i. 84. ETERNAL, infernal, damned (used to express extreme abhorrence); I. ii. 160. EVEN; 66 e. field," i... level ground; V. i. 17. ―, pure, unblemished; II. i. 133. EVER, always; V. iii. 21. EVILS, evil things; II. i. 79. EXHALATIONS, meteors; 44. EXIGENT, exigency, crisis; V. i. 19. EXORCIST, one who raises spirits; II. i. FAMED WITH, made famous by; I. ii. FANTASIES, imaginings; II. i. 231. way, manner; (trisyllabic); IV. iii. 135. FASHION; "begin his f.", begin to be fashionable with him; IV. i. 39. FASHION, work upon, shape; II. i. 220. FAVOUR, appearance; I. ii. 91. countenance; II. i. 76. FAVOUR'S, appearance is; I. iii. 129. 203. FORM, manner of behaving; I. ii. 303. FORMAL CONSTANCY, proper com posure; II. i. 227. FORMER, foremost; V. i. 80. FORTH, to go out; I. ii. 293. FORTH OF, out of; III. iii. 3. FREEDOM OF REPEAL, free recall; III i. 54. FRESH, freshly; II. i. 224. FRET, variegate (as with a kind of fretwork pattern); II. i. 104. be vexed; IV. iii. 42. |