Katie Felton

Mr. Krucli

English

6 April 2005

 

  1. Puns: A trade, sir, that I hope I may use with a safe conscience, which is, indeed, sir a mender of bad soles.

         Why sir, I cobble you.

Metaphors: I be alive and your memory hold and your dinner worth eating.

                   This rudeness is a sauce to his wit.

Similes: As proper men as ever trod upon neat’s leather have gone upon my handiwork.

            If the tag-rag people did not clap him and hiss him, according as he pleased and displeased them , as they used to do  the players in the theater

Images: The rabblement hooted and clapped their chapped hands and threw up their sweaty night-caps and uttered such a deal of stinking breath.

            He fell down in the market-place, and foamed at the mouth and was speechless.

Scansion: You blocks/ you stones/ you worse/ than sense/ less things!

                 And do/ you now/ put on/ your best/ attire?

  1. A few people rhyme but at the end of a scene. The commoners speak in prose. All the high class and main characters speak in blank verse.
  2. Caesar: strong minded, power hungry, bossy, unforgiving, and suspicious

Brutus: loyal, shy, kind, gullible and trustworthy

Cassius: suspicious, trickster, mysterious, untrustworthy and a liar.

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