An exchange follows in which the commoners joke and respond with considerable wit. Marullus is in no mood for their banter; both he and Flavius are jealous of Caesar's popularity and sympathetic to Pompey's causes. Marullus reminds the commoners that not too long ago they gathered in the streets to celebrate Pompey as their leader. He now orders them to return to their homes and repent of their disloyalty.
The information Casca gives about Marullus and Flavius is that the tribunes were stripped of the positions as civil servants for removing decorations from Caesar's statutes. This is from Julius Caesar, Act 1, Scene i.
commonersThe common people of Rome, as mentioned by Marullus in Act 1.The common people of Rome, as mentioned by Marullus in Act 1.
That would be the FOIP act, or Freedom Of Information Privacy.
He didn't know what side to choose.
The conversation between the cobbler and Marullus (lines 9-19).
You may be thinking of a Freedom of Information act, but I don't think that will work. You'll have to check with an attorney.
boi
By acting in a manner that the society would condone - you can tell what's important to them by the way the characters act.
The tables in the lesson reveal that many Greek prefixes often act as modifiers or indicators of a word's meaning. They frequently alter the root word to give more specific information about its context, such as negating its meaning (as in "a-" or "an-") or indicating quantity or size (as in "micro-" or "mega-").
boi
In Act 1 Scene1 of Shakespeare's Julius Caesar we see ordinary folks decorating statues in the street in honour of Caesar's victory in the civil war. Marullus and Flavius protest, telling them that they have no business celebrating a victory in a civil war, since a Roman lost the war as much as won it. Flavius then tells Marullus that they should "disrobe the images" if they find them "deck'd with ceremonies." Marullus then asks, "May we do so? You know it is the feast of Lupercal." Flavius retorts, "It is no matter; let no images be hung with Caesar's trophies." So off they go and do it.Was what they did illegal? Marullus seems worried that it is against the laws of the Lupercalia. But it was not. The Lupercalia had nothing to do with military victories. Nor was it a proper triumph, not being a victory against the enemies of Rome. But even if it was legal to do it, it was not a wise thing to do with a dictator (both in name and action) like Caesar around. Casca reports in the next scene, "Marullus and Flavius, for pulling scarfs off Caesar's images, are put to silence."
In Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman," the first act spans over one evening. The audience is given information about the death of the salesman, Willy Loman, early in the play through conversations and flashbacks that reveal his struggles and the impact of his death on his family.