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English, 16.07.2019 22:30 Syaralopez

Excerpt from julius caesar by william shakespeare caesar: who is it in the press that calls on me? i hear a tongue shriller than all the music cry "caesar! " speak, caesar is turn'd to hear. soothsayer: beware the ides of march. caesar: what man is that? brutus: a soothsayer bids you beware the ides of march. excerpt from lives by plutarch furthermore, there was a certaine soothsayer, that had given caesar warning long afore, to take heed of the day of the ides of march (which is the fifteenth of the month), for on that day he should be in great danger. that day being come, caesar going unto the senate-house, and speaking merrily to the soothsayer, told him, "the ides of march be come." "so they be," softly answered the soothsayer, "but yet are they not past." which statement best explains how shakespeare drew from his source to create the play? a.)shakespeare took his portrayal of caesar's personality from the source. b.)shakespeare copied some of the source's wordings and phrases. c.)shakespeare adapted the interchange and conversation from the source. d.)shakespeare followed the source closely, but changed its basic meaning.

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Excerpt from julius caesar by william shakespeare caesar: who is it in the press that calls on me?...
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