[168] Julius Caesar.
[169] Ibid.
[170] Shakespeare, His Life, Art and Characters.
[171] Shakespeare Commentaries.
[172] Julius Caesar.
[173] Marcus Brutus.
[174] Of course the substitution of the third for the second or first person is very noticeable all through this play, and may have been due to an idea on Shakespeare’s part that such a mode of utterance suited the classical and Roman majesty of the theme. But this rather confirms than refutes the argument of the text, for the usage is exceptionally conspicuous in regard to Caesar, in whom the majesty of Rome is summed up.
[175] Compare the argument in the Phaedo, with its conclusion: “Then there may be reason in saying that a man should wait and not take his own life till God summons him.” Jowett’s Plato, Vol. I.
[176] Voltaire decorously invents a secret marriage!
[177] The comparison of Dion with Brutus.