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Lakshdham High School Goregaon East Mumbai
Julius Caesar Summary. Jealous conspirators convince Caesar's friend Brutus to join their assassination plot against Caesar. To stop Caesar from gaining too much power, Brutus and the conspirators kill him on the Ides of March. Mark Antony drives the conspirators out of Rome and fights them in a battle.
Lakshdham High School Goregaon East Mumbai
Julius Caesar Summary. Jealous conspirators convince Caesar's friend Brutus to join their assassination plot against Caesar. To stop Caesar from gaining too much power, Brutus and the conspirators kill him on the Ides of March. Mark Antony drives the conspirators out of Rome and fights them in a battle.
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LifestyleTranscript
00:00 [Music]
00:27 Men's home to hide the creatures, get you home, is this a holiday?
00:32 What? No you not? Be mechanical, you ought not walk upon this slavery day without the sign of your profession.
00:39 Speak, what trade art thou?
00:42 Well, sir, I'm a carpenter.
00:47 Well, then, I'll admit, and I'll use what does thou on the best of men learn.
00:54 You, sir, what trade are you?
00:56 Truly, sir, in respect of a fine workman, I am, but as you would say, a cobbler.
01:02 But what trade are you? Answer me directly.
01:04 A trade, sir, I hope I may use in the same condition, which is indeed, sir, a mender for the bad souls.
01:11 What trade, O men, what trade?
01:13 Nay, I beseech you, sir, be not out with me, but if you be out, sir, I can mend you.
01:20 What means is the fire? Mend me, O fucking fellow.
01:24 Why, sir, how will you?
01:26 You are a cobbler, are you?
01:28 Truly, sir, all that I live by is with thee on.
01:34 Therefore, I pardon thy soul today. Why dost you leave these men about the streets?
01:40 Truly, sir, to wear out their shoes, to get myself into good work.
01:44 But indeed, sir, we all live holiday between Caesar and the joy in his life.
01:51 You plough, you stow, you force and bless the streets.
01:55 We go on, we'll go on.
01:57 Go, go, good men, and for this fault,
02:00 Assemble all the poor men of the zone and draw them to the river banks,
02:04 And keep yourselves in the channel, in the lowest field,
02:07 To kiss the most excited shores of all.
02:10 Go you down that way, 'twas the capital, this way with I,
02:13 And disrobe their heads in a fine tent, and take them their feet.
02:19 May we do so. You know, and it is a piece of musical.
02:22 It is no matter. Let no images behave with Caesar's trophies.
02:25 I love out and paradise I have on the streets. So do you too, my equal, see that thing.
02:30 [Piano music]
02:54 Calpurnia! Calpurnia!
02:58 Speak, ho! Speak, ho! Caesar speaks!
03:01 Calpurnia! Here, my lord!
03:05 It's time to banish thee and turn this way when he does undisclose.
03:10 And do this! Caesar, my lord!
03:13 For he does not think you are speed, Antonius, to touch Calpurnia.
03:17 For our angels' sake, the barren thugs in the holy chaste shake off their seraphim's.
03:22 I shall remember when Caesar says, "Do this, and it is performed."
03:26 Set off, and leave no seraphim out.
03:29 Caesar!
03:30 Huh? Who calls?
03:32 With every line we sing, "Peace yet again!"
03:36 I hear the tongues, shriller than all the music.
03:39 Cry, "Caesar, speak!" Caesar is torn to love.
03:43 Be there, the eyes of March.
03:46 What man is that?
03:47 A soothsayer with you. Beware the eyes of March.
03:50 Let him perform me. Let me see his face.
03:53 Foe! Clash on the dome! Look upon Caesar!
03:57 What sayest thou to me now? Say once again.
04:05 Beware the eyes of March.
04:08 He will be gone. Let us leave him. Fast.
04:12 [Music]
04:16 [Music]
04:22 [Music]
04:48 [Music]
04:53 [Music]
05:06 [Music]
05:11 [Music]
05:33 [Music]
06:02 [Music]
06:07 [Music]
06:17 [Music]
06:22 [Music]
06:41 [Music]
06:46 [Music]
06:56 [Applause]
07:07 [Music]
07:13 I am not the Aesop.
07:15 I do lack the heart of a quickspin that is natural.
07:19 Let me not be known.
07:21 Gracious, God is our Lord.
07:23 Brutus, I do observe you now of late.
07:26 I have not realized the love that I was going to give you.
07:30 Be not deceived if I have failed my duty.
07:34 Wretched I am of great compassion of some differences.
07:40 Conception is only proper to myself.
07:43 That gives them sight, perhaps, to my behaviors.
07:47 Nor pursue any further my reflects.
07:50 Then that is of Brutus, to himself I call.
07:54 Forget the show of love, for the rain.
07:57 Brutus, I have the muckiest of your passions.
08:01 By means whereof is blessed to make you free.
08:04 How to free it back?
08:05 By the imagination.
08:07 Tell me, Brutus, can you see your past?
08:10 No, gracious.
08:12 The eye sees not itself, but by the reflection of some other things.
08:17 This is just.
08:19 I must bring it to the vision, Brutus.
08:21 And since you know that you do not see yourself through the will of the reflection,
08:25 I, your God, will want to dispose of your son.
08:28 And that of your son, you get your heart.
08:31 And be not jealous, gracious, Brutus.
08:33 Would I not love to?
08:35 If you know that I do for it men, and have this heart.
08:38 I fear that your first passage by putting, it hold me anxious.
08:43 To all failures, to leave me anxious.
08:46 Hail, Caesar!
08:49 Hail, Caesar!
08:51 Hail, Caesar!
08:53 What meant that noise?
08:57 I do fear the people choose Caesar for their king.
09:01 As you really fear it, then must I think you would not have it so.
09:05 I would not, yet I love him well.
09:08 Hail, Caesar!
09:15 Hail, Caesar!
09:17 Hail, Caesar!
09:19 What is it that you will impart to me,
09:27 if it ought to work a general good,
09:31 say honour in one eye, and death in the other,
09:33 and I will look upon them both indifferently.
09:37 Hail, Caesar!
09:45 Hail, Caesar!
09:47 I do believe I am blatched.
09:55 The games are done, and Caesar is returning.
10:03 And Doris?
10:07 Caesar.
10:09 Your Cassius is a lean and ugly look.
10:11 He thinks too much.
10:13 Such men are dangerous.
10:15 Fear him not, Caesar.
10:17 He is not dangerous.
10:19 He is a noble Roman, and well-known.
10:21 I fear him not.
10:23 He reads much.
10:25 He is a great observer, and he looks quite through the deeds of men.
10:29 He loves no blade.
10:31 As thou dost, he hears no music.
10:33 Send him he smiles, and smiles in such a sort as to be mocked himself.
10:39 Come on my right hand, for this dear is done,
10:41 and tell me what you truly think of Cassius.
10:45 [COUGHING]
10:59 You fool me.
11:01 Will you stay with me?
11:03 Hey, Cassia, tell us what has John's day.
11:05 For Brutus, for Caesar, was very sad.
11:11 You were there with him. Were you not?
11:13 I should then not ask, but I chanced.
11:17 Why, could that do?
11:19 What was this making noise for?
11:21 Why, could that do?
11:23 They shouted thrice. What was the last cry?
11:27 Aye, Mary was it.
11:29 He was often the crowned thrice,
11:31 and each time, tender than the other, he put it by.
11:35 And at every putting by, my honest neighbours shouted.
11:39 Who was put in the crown?
11:41 Why, Anjali.
11:43 Tell us the man you are putting, Cassius.
11:47 I can, as well we have, as tell the man of it.
11:51 It was me of Ullary. I did not want it.
11:55 I saw one Anjali offer it in the town once.
11:58 He put it by, but for all that, to my thinking, he would pay an advantage.
12:04 Then he offered it to him again.
12:07 Then he put it by again, but to my thinking, he was very low to lay his fingers upon it.
12:15 Then he offered it in the town for the third time.
12:18 He put it the third time by, and as he still refused it, my honest neighbours shouted.
12:25 They hooted and clapped their chopped hands.
12:29 The singer, the sweaty nightcap, and others, such a beam of sleepy breath,
12:34 that it had almost sunk Cedro.
12:37 For he swooned and fell down at it.
12:40 But for my own part, I does not love, for fear of opening my lips and his seaweed-devil hair.
12:48 What? Did Caesar swoon?
12:50 He fell down in the marketplace and combed that mouth, and was speechless.
12:56 This is very like. He had to fall in sleepiness.
13:00 No, he had not.
13:02 You and I, and honest Caspar, we have to call him so.
13:06 I do not know what will mean by that, but I am sure Caesar fell down.
13:11 Did Caesar say anything?
13:13 Aye, he spoke brief.
13:15 What of that?
13:16 Nay, and I tell you that.
13:18 Caspar, will you supper with me tonight?
13:24 No, I promise not.
13:26 Will you dine with me tomorrow?
13:28 Nay, if your minds hold, and your dinner calls for eating.
13:32 Good, I expect you.
13:34 Do so. Farewell, both.
13:36 What of that fellow? He is. He was fit as when he went to school.
13:44 I'll do so.
13:52 For this time, I will leave you. Tomorrow, if you wish to see me, come home to me, or I'll come home to you.
14:03 I'll do so.
14:07 But do this, who are not yet on the U.S. scene, as long as you have the will. As is knight in second hands, and in the game to himself as it is, writing or attending a grand meeting, Caesar's ambition should be gladiated.
14:30 This is my kingdom come, this is where my kingdom lies.
14:54 The burning star is the last of all, and the lights fade out on the scene of the storm. So, they dug your grave with the masquerade, with the crawling eye, and the mess you made.
15:14 Why are you so sad? Why are you so sad?
15:19 Are you not moved? With all the slayers of all, chased like a pained and formed, never till tonight, never till now, Hawaii got through a tempest, so fierce, dropping fire.
15:31 Peter, can a skiffle strike the heavens? Or the world, to sortie with the gods, in senses dead, to send destruction?
15:39 He did, Casca. It is a slayer's sports time, but my gods will do things after their sashing.
15:45 Does Caesar come to Casca tomorrow?
15:49 Indeed. For he does. He did to Dantonese to send word to you. He would be there tomorrow.
15:56 Good night, young Casca.
15:58 Farewell, sister.
15:59 Casca, dry your voice. Your ear is wet.
16:03 Cassius, what night is this?
16:06 A very pleasing night, you old smirk.
16:09 Now that I, Casca, may be here, who's there to send the word?
16:14 Dantanos, lions, open graves and roads, and those lying in capital. A man who fights against myself and me in personal actions, yet believes his god, and fearful of his strange rush.
16:28 This Caesar that you mean, is it not your ship?
16:32 It is not me, but this. A young sufferer shows no remission.
16:37 Indeed. They say the second god tomorrow, meaning to our self-esteem and everything, he shall then show the vice he has done, and in every place, save his own, will be.
16:49 I know that I will tread this dark path. Cassius, from Mordent, will deliver Cassius. Their rebels, who make me most strong, their rebels, desirous to defeat.
17:02 So can I, every godman in his own right hand, to follow, to cancel his captivity.
17:09 Then why should Caesar be a son of men? Who am I? I know he will not be a god, but he sees the Romans are but sheep, he will know nothing.
17:20 But he sees all the Romans not sick, but lowly.
17:25 Where has power led me? I go on to speak this before a villain born man. Then I know my ennishment should be great.
17:34 A mount and any to me, as any of them.
17:38 You speak to Cassius, and to such a man that is not willing to lend aid. Hold my hand, speak, Cassius, for the death of all these beasts, and I shall set this book of knight as barred, and who goes for a death?
17:52 There's bargain made. I've already been there, now that I have. This, some sort of noblest mighty Romans, to uncoil in tragedy of already dangerous consequence.
18:08 And my death, I know, will stay with me in the farthest porch.
18:13 Stand close to the line, for your control it takes.
18:18 Sister, he's dread. Sister, where is he, sir?
18:23 To fight our cue. Who's that?
18:26 No, it is Cassius, who are incorporate to our attempts.
18:30 I'm glad of it. What a fearful knight it is. Those two or three of us have seen strange sights.
18:37 I'm not stifled. Tell me.
18:39 Yes, you are. Okay, sister, good, but when the noble list are by.
18:45 You can tend good enough. Take this paper, and look you late in Freyja's chair, where Brutus will fight it.
18:52 And set this up with wax, and return to hold for face bold.
18:58 Is this with Brutus, and what is there?
19:01 All but when the silver and these swords receive you at your house.
19:05 Well, I will hide, and so will turn this paper as you may.
19:09 Kata, prepare for my schedule. Kampya, you and I will yet stay all day to see Brutus at his house.
19:18 Three months of him is ours only, and the man in time to our next encounter you can't pass.
19:24 Oh, he's been hired in all the evil's house, and that which will appear offends us.
19:31 His countenance, like Brutus' I believe, will change to virtue and to goodness.
19:38 With him I will squirt, and I will praise him.
19:41 We are done and sighted. Let us go, for it is after midnight.
19:45 And, though a day, we will awake and shudder.
19:49 I am calling you, my lord.
19:54 Let me and April, my study. And when it is lighted, come and call me here.
19:59 I will, my lord.
20:02 It must be by his death, he would be crowned. All that might change his nature, that is the question.
20:09 By the bright day that brings forth the adobe, and that craves weary.
20:14 Crown him that, and then, I grant, put a sting in him.
20:18 Passionate thus, that what is augmented, would run to these and these extremities, and therefore, into the serpent's egg.
20:29 Which, as would cruel spying, disturbs us, and kill with a shell.
20:34 We are too poor, upon your death. Good Lord, Brutus, do we trouble you?
20:46 I have been awake, I have been up this hour, awake all night.
20:49 Know all these men that come along with you.
20:52 Yes, every man of them. This, a staggering.
20:57 This, a deafening. He's welcome.
20:59 This, gaseous Brutus. They're all welcome. He's welcome too.
21:04 This, Phineas. This, Cactus. And this, wettiless Cimber.
21:09 They're all welcome. What possible cares will depose themselves, at which your eyes and night.
21:16 Shall I read the words?
21:18 Give me your name, Zorro, one by one.
21:31 And let us swear, all your illusions.
21:34 [Cough]
21:36 [Music]
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32:05 [Applause]